Fabricating spaces and knowledge: the Berlin-Dalldorf Municipal Asylum for “Feeble-Minded” Children (1880–1900)

Jona T. Garz
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Abstract

PurposeThis paper has two purposes. One is to examine the ways mentally disabled children were disciplined and cared for in Berlin, Germany/Prussia, at the end of the 19th century, by considering the way the architecture of the asylum affected the practices within it. The second purpose is to examine the manner in which the practices at the Dalldorf Asylum, especially the administrative paperwork, fabricated and stabilized the medico-pedagogical category of “feeble-mindedness”.Design/methodology/approachThis paper engages with reflections on asylum architecture and its connection to disciplining bodies as shown in Disability History and linking these insights to recent scholarship from the field of Science and Technology Studies on the fabrication of knowledge through observation. Drawing on microhistory as methodology it examines the fabrication of “feeble-mindedness” with and within the Dalldorf Asylum, focusing on architecture and design as well as administrative practices.FindingsThe analysis of the asylum's architecture reveals how certain ideas of hygiene and control derived from 19th century psychiatry, along with personal attentiveness and individualized learning were incorporated into the building, creating the notion of a “feeble-minded child” as being simultaneously dangerous and in danger. The paper further shows how the professionals involved were struggling with diagnosing these children, further showcasing that the space as well as the categorization of children, oscillating between psychiatry and pedagogy, has to be understood as contested.Originality/valueThis paper engages findings on the disciplining structures organizing everyday life within the asylum with concepts of fabricating knowledge as central to science studies. The Dalldorf Asylum, the earliest state-funded asylum for mentally disabled children in Germany and largely understudied, is used as the main research object. A microhistorical approach allows to make visible the intricate yet mundane practices involved in stabilizing the category of “feeble-mindedness”.
制造空间和知识:柏林-达尔多夫“弱智”儿童收容所(1880-1900)
本文有两个目的。其中之一是考察19世纪末德国/普鲁士柏林的精神残疾儿童受到管教和照顾的方式,通过考虑收容所的建筑对其内部实践的影响。第二个目的是审查达尔多夫疯人院的做法,特别是行政文书工作,捏造和稳定"弱智"这一医学教学类别的方式。设计/方法/方法本文对收容所建筑及其与《残疾史》中所示的纪律机构的联系进行了反思,并将这些见解与最近科学和技术研究领域关于通过观察制造知识的学术研究联系起来。以微观历史为方法论,研究了达尔多夫收容所及其内部“弱智”的制造,重点关注建筑和设计以及行政实践。对精神病院建筑的分析揭示了来自19世纪精神病学的某些卫生和控制理念,以及个人关注和个性化学习是如何融入建筑的,创造了“弱智儿童”的概念,即既危险又处于危险之中。这篇论文进一步展示了参与其中的专业人士是如何努力诊断这些儿童的,进一步展示了儿童的空间和分类,在精神病学和教育学之间摇摆不定,必须被理解为有争议的。原创性/价值本论文将研究结果纳入了在精神病院组织日常生活的纪律结构,并将制造知识的概念作为科学研究的中心。达尔多夫精神病院是德国最早由国家资助的精神残疾儿童收容所,在很大程度上尚未得到充分研究,它被用作主要研究对象。微观历史的方法可以让我们看到稳定“弱智”类别所涉及的复杂而平凡的实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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