当我听到笛声时,我感到非常高兴和振奋":维多利亚晚期布罗德摩尔对犯罪疯子的治疗》。

Jade Shepherd
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摘要

这篇文章通过研究以前从未见过的档案记录(包括病人的信件),探讨了维多利亚晚期布罗德摩尔罪犯疯人院病人的待遇和经历,并确定了该机构在英国疯人院治疗制度的广泛历史中的地位。文章提出了两个主要论点。第一个论点与维多利亚时期疯人院治疗方法的演变有关。历史学家们普遍认为,在 19 世纪 60 年代和 70 年代,伴随着道德治疗的发展及其治愈精神失常的承诺而出现的乐观情绪逐渐消退,"精神病悲观主义 "占据了上风。迄今为止,人们想当然地认为所有精神病院都反映了这种变化。我对这一假设提出质疑,因为我发现布罗德摩并没有完全融入这一框架。相反,该精神病院在维多利亚时代晚期一直强调工作、休闲和仁慈,这往往受到病人和医生的积极欢迎。其次,我表明,在布罗德摩的案例中,道德待遇与其说是由性别差异决定的,不如说是由精神病院中的两类不同病人--女王的快乐病人和精神失常的罪犯--决定的。病人之间的这种区别不仅导致了布罗德摩尔内部不同的治疗模式,也对病人的庇护经历产生了影响。布罗德莫的记录提供了接触病人信件的特权,这不仅为维多利亚时期精神病院治疗方式的演变提供了一个新的视角,还揭示了精神病院病人及其家属对精神病院护理的罕见看法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
'I am very glad and cheered when I hear the flute': The Treatment of Criminal Lunatics in Late Victorian Broadmoor.

Through an examination of previously unseen archival records, including patients' letters, this article examines the treatment and experiences of patients in late Victorian Broadmoor Criminal Lunatic Asylum and stakes the place of this institution within the broader history of therapeutic regimes in British asylums. Two main arguments are put forth. The first relates to the evolution of treatment in Victorian asylums. Historians tend to agree that in the 1860s and 1870s 'psychiatric pessimism' took hold, as the optimism that had accompanied the growth of moral treatment, along with its promise of a cure for insanity, abated. It has hitherto been taken for granted that all asylums reflected this change. I question this assumption by showing that Broadmoor did not sit neatly within this framework. Rather, the continued emphasis on work, leisure and kindness privileged at this institution into the late Victorian period was often welcomed positively by patients and physicians alike. Second, I show that, in Broadmoor's case, moral treatment was determined not so much by the distinction between the sexes as the two different classes of patients - Queen's pleasure patients and insane convicts - in the asylum. This distinction between patients not only led to different modes of treatment within Broadmoor, but had an impact on patients' asylum experiences. The privileged access to patients' letters that the Broadmoor records provide not only offers a new perspective on the evolution of treatment in Victorian asylums, but also reveals the rarely accessible views of asylum patients and their families on asylum care.

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