How did the affliction we now know as insanity move from a religious phenomenon to a medical one? How did social class, gender, and ethnicity affect the experience of mental trauma and the way psychiatrists diagnosed and treated patients? In answering these questions, this important volume mines the rich and unusually detailed records of one of Germany's first modern insane asylums, the Eberbach Asylum in the duchy of Nassau. It is a book on the historical relationship between madness and modernity that both builds upon and challenges Michel Foucault's landmark work on this topic, a bold study that gives generous consideration to madness from the patient's perspective while also shedding new light on sexuality, politics, and antisemitism in nineteenth-century Germany. Drawing on the case records of several hundred asylum patients, Sex, Religion, and the Making of Modern Madness reconstructs the encounters of state officials and medical practitioners with peasant madness and deviancy during a transitional period in the history of both Germany and psychiatry. As author Ann Goldberg explains, this era witnessed the establishment of psychiatry as a legitimate medical specialty during a time of social upheaval, as Germany underwent the shift toward a capitalist order and the modern state. Focusing on such "illnesses" as religious madness, nymphomania, and masturbatory insanity, as well as the construct of Jewishness, she probes the daily encounters in which psychiatric categories were applied, experienced, and resisted within the settings of family, village, and insane asylum. The book is a model of microhistory, breaking new ground in the historiography of psychiatry as it synthetically applies approaches from "the history of everyday life," anthropology, poststructuralism, and feminist studies. In contrast to earlier, anecdotal studies of "the asylum patient," Goldberg employs diagnostic patterns to illuminate the ways in which madness--both in psychiatric practice and in the experience of patients--was structured by gender, class, and "race." She thus examines both the social basis of rural mental trauma in the Vorm rz and the political and medical practices that sought to refashion this experience. This study sheds light on a range of issues concerning gender, religion, class relations, ethnicity, and state-building. It will appeal to students and scholars of a number of disciplines.
I highly recommend this book for a number of reasons. First, it is very phenomenologically sensitive to, as can be gathered from documentation, the experience of those being 'treated' for 'mental illness'. Second, it shows quite convincingly that the behavior and experience that is called insane is a socially intelligible reaction to social situations. Third, it does the above without, as far as I can detect, trying to force the scene into a pre-set theoritical mold. This point deserves emphasis. Too often social histories of insanity, however sensitive to institutionalization and social construction, tend to be more concerned with the big picture, whereas this book limits itself more severely than others, and seems more sensitive to the people as people, and not as just 'social constructions'. Moreover, the 'angle' from which she sees insanity is constantly shifting to allow the voices to speak for themselves. What i got out of this book is that a great deal of the trouble then, and indeed now I must say, is that those in power to decide who is mad and how to treat the mad, are rather routinely, and institutiionally, whole insensitive to the experience of madness from a first-person point of view, and that this state of affairs produces not so much a distortion as an existential shockwave of misunderstanding, suffering, and hell on earth with the best of intentions. The beauty of this book is to be found in the diversity of scope, perspective (gender, class, doctor, patient, poor, rich, religious, scientific, family, interpersonal, asylum, sex, micro and macro, politics, laws, and on and on) and detail with which she draws out the above. A welcome edition to the works of the likes of R.D. Laing, Goffman, jules henry, paul goodman, and others who point out that seemingly irrational and insane actions become perfectly intelligible as ordinary human reactions to barbaric interpersonal non-interactions in barbaric institutions. I recommend this over Foucault, as this is more accessible in virtue of being more personal, human, direct, and micro-historically sensitive. Goldberg brings the people to life, a trait of writing noticably missing from a lot of philosophy, and the pseudo-scienctific garbage of psychology and psychiatry.
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