仇恨:贫穷、精神病和肯尼亚殖民地的越界政治,1939- 1959。

IF 0.6 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Will Jackson
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引用次数: 10

摘要

这篇文章探讨了精神病学和性之间的相互关系,这两者都是殖民主义和帝国近代史研究的沃土。这篇文章利用了一系列与20世纪40年代和50年代在内罗毕Mathari精神病院住院的欧洲病人有关的案件档案,展示了殖民时期欧洲人的性侵犯是如何促成并与精神痛苦结合在一起的。考虑到精神病治疗是社会控制的一种形式,文章调查了一些案例,其中一名欧洲病人被认为违反了肯尼亚定居者社会的规范性行为准则。这些文件表明,肯尼亚的越轨性行为本身是由性别、种族和阶级的指标构成的,这些指标既坚持又不确定。虽然精神病学作为一种社会控制在这里有一定程度的价值,但更有价值的是试图辨别某些形式的性行为在诊断术语中被理解的特定方式。我们看到,与非洲人发生性关系的男性在抵达医院时往往被诊断为“抑郁”,但最终被判定为精神正常。相比之下,女性更容易被诊断为精神病患者,我认为,这一诊断有助于解释生活在白人社会边缘的贫穷欧洲女性独特的越界地位。此外,与白人男性不同的是,女性不必与非欧洲人发生性关系来违反性规范:这是因为女性的贫困是一个性问题,而男性的贫困在某种程度上显然不是。贫穷的白人妇女的特点是对自己的性行为不确定——继而是可疑的种族身份——社会污染的问题被描述为一个人被污染的种族血统和健康的种族储备的潜在污染。本文旨在探讨当前关于性与帝国、“白人次等性”以及精神病学和心理健康社会史的历史争论。为保护患者匿名,所有患者姓名均已更改。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bad blood: poverty, psychopathy and the politics of transgression in Kenya Colony, 1939-59.

This article examines the inter-relationship between psychiatry and sex, both fertile fields within the recent historiography of colonialism and empire. Using a series of case files pertaining to European patients admitted to the Mathari Mental Hospital in Nairobi during the 1940s and 1950s, this article shows how sexual transgression among colonial Europeans precipitated, and was combined with, mental distress. Considering psychiatric treatment as a form of social control, the article investigates a number of cases in which a European patient had been perceived to have transgressed the normative sexual behaviour codes of settler society in Kenya. What these files suggest is that transgressive sexuality in Kenya was itself framed by indices, as insistent as they were uncertain, of gender, race and class. While psychiatry as social control has some degree of purchase here, more valuable is an attempt to discern the particular ways in which certain forms of sexual behaviour were understood in diagnostic terms. Men who had sex with Africans, we see, tended to be diagnosed as 'depressed' on arrival at the hospital but were judged to be mentally normal consequently. Women, by contrast, were liable to be diagnosed as psychopathic, a diagnosis, I argue, that helped to explain the uniquely transgressive status of impoverished European women living alone in the margins of white society. Unlike white men, moreover, women did not have to have sex with non-Europeans to transgress sexual codes: this is because female poverty was a sexual problem in a way that male poverty decidedly was not. Poor white women were marked by uncertainty over their sexual behaviour—and dubious racial identity in its turn—and the problem of social contamination was described by reference both to the polluted racial ancestry of an individual and to the prospective contamination of healthy racial stocks. This article aims to address current historical debates around sex and empire, 'white subalternity' and the social history of psychiatry and mental health. All names have been changed to protect patient anonymity.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
期刊介绍: This journal has established itself as an internationally respected forum for the presentation and discussion of recent research in the history of the British Empire and Commonwealth and in comparative European colonial experiences. Particular attention is given to imperial policy and rivalries; colonial rule and local response; the rise of nationalism; the process of decolonization and the transfer of power and institutions; the evolution of the Imperial and Commonwealth association in general; and the expansion and transformation of British culture. The journal also features a substantial review section of recent literature.
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