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Mad Tales from the Raj Waltraud Ernst

Mad Tales from the Raj By Waltraud Ernst

Mad Tales from the Raj by Waltraud Ernst


Summary

A study of European insanity within the context of British colonialism in early 19th-century India, which challenges the assumption that Western medical psychology was impartial, and highlights the extent to which psychological practice reflected British colonial ideology and practice.

Mad Tales from the Raj Summary

Mad Tales from the Raj: European Insane in British India, 1800-58 by Waltraud Ernst

Europeans in India had ambivalent feelings towards their mentally deranged compatriots. The authorities encouraged medical practitioners to treat European lunatics with kindness and respect, but they also insisted on segregating them from the European public, as well as from Indians. This attitude did not simply echo practices in the colonial motherland: it is closely linked to the British imperative of preserving the prestige of the ruling race. Like poor Europeans and vagrants, lunatics were seen as tarnishing the image of the British in India. Mad Tales From the Raj is an extensively researched study of European insanity within the context of British colonalism in early 19th century India. The author challenges the assumption that western medical psychology was impartial, and highlights the extent to which it not only reflected British colonial ideology and practice, but also helped to shape the interaction between rulers and ruled. Waltraud Ernst, a psychologist and historian, shows how the colonial twist assumed by European lunacy policy in India is reflected in psychological assessment and clinical treatment. She also discusses individual patients' life-stories and their experiences of confinement in asylums in India and England. Based on archival sources and medical experts' reports, the book provides an account of contemporary psychiatric treatment and colonial policies. It will be of interest not only to students of colonial history, medical sociology and related disciplines, but to all those with a general interest in British life in the colonies.

Table of Contents

Ex Oriente Lux - the light of the Orient; madness and the politics of colonial rule; ideological positions; bureaucracy, corruption and public opinion; the sick, the poor, and the mad; administrative reforms and legal provision; the institutions; the role of institutionalization; towards uniformity; inside the institutions; the medical profession; the search for fortune and professional recognition; the medicalization of madness; the subordination of native medicine; medicine and empire; the patients; a passage from India; the changing fortunes of asylum inmates; being insane in British India; medical theory and practice; popular images and medical concepts; moral therapy, mental illness, and physical derangement; diagnostics and therapeutic practice; aetiology and prognosis treatment; the question of non-restraint; social discrimination, racial prejudice and medical concepts - east is east, and west is best.

Additional information

GOR005798711
9780415009409
0415009405
Mad Tales from the Raj: European Insane in British India, 1800-58 by Waltraud Ernst
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
1991-01-03
208
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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