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History of Psychiatry
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Music, madness and the body: symptom and cure

Dolly Mackinnon

History Department, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 3010. a.mackinnon{at}unimelb.edu.au

Building on Sander L. Gilman's exemplary work on images of madness and the body, this article examines images of music, madness and the body by discussing the persistent cultural beliefs stemming from Classical Antiquity that underpin music as medicinal. These images reflect the body engaged in therapeutic musical activities, as well as musical sounds forming part of the evidence of the mental diagnostic state of a patient in case records. The historiography of music as medicinal has been overlooked in the history of psychiatry. This article provides a brief background to the cultural beliefs that underlie examples of music as both symptom and cure in 19th- and 20th-century asylum records in Australia, Britain, Europe and North America.

Key Words: asylums • Australia • body • Britain • Europe • history • insanity • music • North America • psychiatry • symptom • treatment

History of Psychiatry, Vol. 17, No. 1, 9-21 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0957154X06058596


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