Catherine Cox 
Negotiating insanity in the southeast of Ireland, 1820–1900 [PDF ebook] 

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This book explores local medical, lay and legal negotiations with the asylum system in nineteenth-century Ireland. It deepens our understanding of attitudes towards the mentally ill and institutional provision for the care and containment of people diagnosed as insane. Uniquely, it expands the analytical focus beyond asylums incorporating the impact that the Irish poor law, petty session courts and medical dispensaries had on the provision of services. It provides insights into life in asylums for patients and staff. The study uses Carlow asylum district – comprised of counties Wexford, Kildare, Kilkenny and Carlow in the southeast of Ireland – to explore the ‘place of the asylum’ in the period.
This book will be useful for scholars of nineteenth-century Ireland, the history of psychiatry and medicine in Britain and Ireland, Irish studies and gender studies.

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Table of Content

Introduction
1. Shaping the Irish asylum system
2. Expansion and demand
3. Routes into the asylum
4. Insanity on display: Magistrates, doctors and the family, 1840–70
5. Institutionalisation: Households and gender
6. Workhouses and the Insane
7. Inside the asylums
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

About the author

Catherine Cox is Director of the Centre for the History of Medicine in Ireland and Lecturer in Modern Irish History at the School of History and Archives, University College Dublin

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Language English ● Format PDF ● Pages 304 ● ISBN 9781526129840 ● File size 14.0 MB ● Publisher Manchester University Press ● City Manchester ● Country GB ● Published 2018 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 6692073 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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