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The (un)dress of the mad poor in England, c.16501850. Part 1School of Historical Studies & Northern Centre for the History of Medicine, University of Newcastle, Armstrong Building, Newcastle uponTyne, NE1 7RU, UK, jonathan.andrews{at}ncl.ac.uk Part 1 of this paper discusses the representation of the mad poor in literature and (to a lesser extent) art, emphasizing how commonly they are found in states of undress. It delineates the meanings behind such portrayals, arguing that the mad were thus displayed: (a) to signify their putative intellectual/ moral degradation, ir rationality and `otherness', and to designate them as an ontologically distinct (and inferior) species of person; (b) to denote their animality/childishness, and their proximity to Nature; (c) to reflect perceived phenomenological realities, such as that the mad were innately prone to denudation, and to tearing or destroying their clothes; and (d) as a direct appeal to charity and relief, and as a sign of their personal neglect (of decency/social codes) or neglect by others. It additionally explores medical representations and explanations of the (un)dress of the insane, before (in Part 2) comparing such representations with actual clothing provision for the mad as recorded in parochial and institutional records.
Key Words: art Bedlam clothing discourse history literature lunatic; madness medical nakedness poverty representation (un)dress
History of Psychiatry, Vol. 18, No. 1,
005-24 (2007) |
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