二十世纪初堪萨斯州贝洛伊特女子工业学校对少年犯和智力低下者的治疗》(Treatmenting Delinquent and Feebleminded Juveniles at the Beloit Industrial School for Girls in Early Twentieth-Century Kansas.
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引用次数: 0
摘要
本研究探讨了公共卫生工作在解决青少年犯罪和弱智问题时所产生的令人不安的意外后果。卫生保健专业人员、学监和其他权威人士将青少年的不良行为,如与 "坏伙伴 "或 "误入歧途"、逃学和小偷小摸等,等同于教养不良、智力低下和遗传性犯罪倾向。本文对堪萨斯州历史学会(Kansas State Historical Society,KSHS)收集的历史文献进行了研究,并重点关注了几个具体案例,揭示了父权制的政治和医疗国家体系是如何保护和疏远被指控有各种行为问题(包括犯罪、不可救药和智力低下)的年轻女性的。我强调被判刑到贝洛伊特女子工业学校的少女的生活,不仅仅是为了更好地理解美国历史上一个孤立的时期,也是为了再现历史。在堪萨斯州整个 20 世纪上半叶,贝洛伊特女子工业学校收容的女孩的叙述所产生的广泛影响揭示了公共卫生努力解决犯罪、传染和不良特征代代相传等问题所带来的令人不安和意想不到的后果。
Treating Delinquent and Feebleminded Juveniles at the Beloit Industrial School for Girls in Early Twentieth-Century Kansas.
This study explores the troubling and unintended consequences of public health efforts to address the problem of juvenile delinquency and feeblemindedness. Health care professionals, superintendents, and other authority figures equated undesirable juvenile behaviors such as keeping "bad company" or "falling in with the wrong crowd," truancy, and petty theft with poor breeding, low intelligence, and inheritable criminal tendencies. This article interrogates historical documentation culled from the Kansas State Historical Society (KSHS) and focuses on a few specific cases to reveal the ways a patriarchal political and medical state system both protected and alienated young woman accused of a myriad of behavior issues including delinquency, incorrigibility, and feeblemindedness. I highlight the lives of juvenile women sentenced to the Beloit Industrial School for Girls not simply to better understand an isolated period in United States history but also reproduction. The broader implications of the narratives of girls housed at the Beloit Industrial School for Girls throughout the first half of the twentieth century in Kansas reveal troubling and unintended consequences of public health efforts to fix the problems of delinquency, contagion, and the generational inheritance of undesirable characteristics.
期刊介绍:
Started in 1946, the Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences is internationally recognized as one of the top publications in its field. The journal''s coverage is broad, publishing the latest original research on the written beginnings of medicine in all its aspects. When possible and appropriate, it focuses on what practitioners of the healing arts did or taught, and how their peers, as well as patients, received and interpreted their efforts.
Subscribers include clinicians and hospital libraries, as well as academic and public historians.