The Most Social of Maladies: Re-Thinking the History of Psychiatry From the Edges of Empire

Author:

Edington ClaireORCID

Abstract

AbstractThis paper argues that the colonial experience was never just “out there” but was a constitutive feature of the global development of psychiatry and, indeed, of social medicine itself. I show how regional knowledge about psychiatry, produced in scientific exchanges across colonial Southeast Asia over four decades and culminating with the 1937 Bandung Conference, became part of new international approaches to health care in rural areas, and later, in developing nations. In particular, I discuss how the embrace of the agricultural colony as a solution to the problem of asylum overcrowding occurred at the same moment that colonial public health experts and officials were moving away from expensive, technocratic fixes to address indigenous health needs. Yet in the search for alternatives to institutionalized care, including forms of family and community support, colonial psychiatrists were increasingly drawn into unpredictable and unwieldy networks of care and economy. Drawing on research from Vietnam, this paper decenters the asylum so as to recast the history of colonial and postcolonial psychiatry as integral to the history of social medicine and global health. The paper then returns to Bandung in 1955, the site of another famous meeting in the history of Third World solidarity, to consider how the embrace of the “Bandung spirit” may provide new avenues for decolonizing the history of colonial and postcolonial psychiatry.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Anthropology,General Medicine,Health (social science)

Reference41 articles.

1. Warwick Anderson (2014) Making Global Health History: The Postcolonial Worldliness of biomedicine. Social History of Medicine 2: 372-384.

2. Amrith, Sunil S (2014) The Internationalization of Health in Southeast Asia. Histories of Health in Southeast Asia: Perspectives on the Long Twentieth century. Tim Harper and Sunil S. Amrith, Indiana University Press.

3. Amrith, Sunil S (2006) Decolonizing International Health: India and Southeast Asia, 1930–1965. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave MacMillan.

4. Brimnes, Niels (2019) “Bandung Revisited: from Rural Hygiene to Primary Health Care” in The League of Nations – Perspectives from the Present. Haakon A. Ikonomou and Karen Gram-Skjoldager, eds. Aarhus: Aarhus University Press 172–181.

5. Brown, Theodore M, Elizabeth Fee (2008) “The Bandoeng Conference of 1937: A Milestone in Health and Development.” American Journal of Public Health 98(1): 42–43.

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