精神病院

E. Tilley, Paúl Christian, S. Ledger, J. Walmsley
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引用次数: 13

摘要

直到20世纪末,学习困难的历史才被纳入其他历史,包括精神病学、特殊教育和残疾的历史。使有学习困难的人及其家庭能够记录自己的历史并为历史记录作出贡献的倡议是最近才出现的,也是强有力的。这项工作的大部分都是由开放大学的学习障碍社会史研究(SHLD)小组领导或支持的,该小组致力于发展“包容性历史”。这篇文章讲述了疯人院项目的故事,在历史学家活动家梅布尔·库珀(Mabel Cooper)的故事的刺激下,在SHLD小组的支持下,有学习困难的演员了解了这段历史,然后提出了他们自己对这段历史的解释,包括它在今天的共鸣。通过他们策划的一场博物馆展览,以及一场身临其境的戏剧表演,演员们利用机构的历史,提醒更广泛的公众注意过去的虐待,以及对学习困难人士的持续边缘化和排斥。这是历史激发行动主义潜力的一个杰出例子。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Madhouse
Until the very end of the twentieth century the history of learning difficulties was subsumed into other histories, of psychiatry, of special education and, indeed, of disability. Initiatives to enable people with learning difficulties and their families to record their own histories and contribute to the historical record are both recent and powerful. Much of this work has been led or supported by The Open University’s Social History of Learning Disability Research (SHLD) group and its commitment to developing “inclusive history.” The article tells the story of the Madhouse Project in which actors with learning difficulties, stimulated by the story of historian activist Mabel Cooper and supported by the SHLD group, learned about and then offered their own interpretations of that history, including its present-day resonances. Through a museum exhibition they curated, and through an immersive theatre performance, the actors used the history of institutions to alert a wider public to the abuses of the past, and the continuing marginalization and exclusion of people with learning difficulties. This is an outstanding example of history’s potential to stimulate activism.
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