Abstract
This article contextualises the production of patient records at Glasgow’s Gartnavel Mental Hospital between 1921 and 1932. Following his appointment as asylum superintendent in 1921, psychiatrist David Kennedy Henderson sought to introduce a so-called dynamic approach to mental health care. He did so, primarily, by encouraging patients to reveal their inner lives through their own language and own understanding of their illness. To this effect, Henderson implemented several techniques devised to gather as much information as possible about patients. He notably established routine ‘staff meetings’ in which a psychiatrist directed questions towards a patient while a stenographer recorded word-for-word the conversation that passed between the two parties. As a result, the records compiled at Gartnavel under Henderson’s guidance offer a unique window into the various strategies deployed by patients, but also allow physicians and hospital staff to negotiate their place amidst these clinical encounters. In this paper, I analyse the production of patient narratives in these materials. The article begins with Henderson’s articulation of his ‘dynamic’ psychotherapeutic method, before proceeding to an in-depth hermeneutic investigation into samples of Gartnavel’s case notes and staff meeting transcripts. In the process, patient–psychiatrist relationships are revealed to be mutually dependent and interrelated subjects of historical enquiry rather than as distinct entities. This study highlights the multi-vocal nature of the construction of stories ‘from below’ and interrogates their subsequent appropriation by historians.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
History,Medicine (miscellaneous),General Nursing
Reference92 articles.
1. Porter, op. cit. (note 1) 175–76.
2. Leys, op. cit. (note 13), 6.
3. This story is contemporaneous with the arrival of psychoanalysis in the British context. Philip Kuhn, ‘Subterranean Histories: The Dissemination of Freud’s Works into the British Discourse on Psychological Medicine: 19–1911’, Psychoanalysis and History, 16, 2 (2014b), 153–214. For an intellectual and historical review of psychoanalysis in Scotland, which began to be more widely disseminated in the 1930s, see Gavin Miller, ‘Scottish Psychoanalysis: A Rational Religion’, Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 44, 1 (2008), 38–58. In his biography of R. D. Laing, Miller also provides an account of post-war psychoanalysis in Scotland. See Miller, ‘Scottish psychoanalysis’ in R. D. Laing (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2004), chapter 5.
4. Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish, The Birth of the Prison, Alan Sheridan (trans.) (New York: Random House, 1979), 191.
5. Case notes no. 301 GB812 HB13/5/182/11, NHSGGCA.
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献