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 Germanys first modern insane asylums, the Eberbach Asylum in the duchy of Nassau. It is a book on the historical relationship betweenmadness and modernity that both builds upon and challenges Michel Foucaults landmark work on this topic, a bold study that gives generous consideration to madness from the patients 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 acapitalist 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 examinesboth the social basis of rural mental trauma in the Vormärz 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.
Introduction; The Duchy of Nassau and the Eberbach Asylum; Section I: Religion; Religious Madness in the Vormarz: Culture, Politics, and the Professionalization of Psychiatry; Religious Madness and the Formation of Patients; Section II: Sexuality and Gender; Medical Representation of Sexual Madness: Nymphomania and Masturbatory Insanity; Doctors and Patients: The Practice(s) of Nymphomania; Women, Sex, and Rural Life; Section III: Delinquincy and Criminality; Masturbatory Insanity and Delinquincy; Jews and the Criminalization of Madness; Conclusion;
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