Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £66.79 GBP
Regular price £75.00 GBP Sale price £66.79 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

Disorder Contained
Mental Breakdown and the Modern Prison in England and Ireland, 1840 – 1900

The first historical study to offer an in-depth exploration of the complex relationship between the prison and mental breakdown.

Catherine Cox (Author), Hilary Marland (Author)

9781108834551, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 10 March 2022

320 pages
23.5 x 16.7 x 2 cm, 0.6 kg

'a convincing - and at times disturbing - account of the effect of prison discipline on the mental health of inmates in 19th-century English and Irish prisons … Recommended.' P. C. Kennedy, Choice

Disorder Contained is the first historical account of the complex relationship between prison discipline and mental breakdown in England and Ireland. Between 1840 and 1900 the expansion of the modern prison system coincided with increased rates of mental disorder among prisoners, exacerbated by the introduction of regimes of isolation, deprivation and hard labour. Drawing on a range of archival and printed sources, the authors explore the links between different prison regimes and mental distress, examining the challenges faced by prison medical officers dealing with mental disorder within a system that stressed discipline and punishment and prisoners' own experiences of mental illness. The book investigates medical officers' approaches to the identification, definition, management and categorisation of mental disorder in prisons, and varied, often gendered, responses to mental breakdown among inmates. The authors also reflect on the persistence of systems of punishment that often aggravate rather than alleviate mental illness in the criminal justice system up to the current day. This title is also available as Open Access.

1. Introduction: Mental disorder and the modern prison in England and Ireland, 1840-1900
2. The making of the modern prison system: reformation, separation and the mind, 1840-1860
3. The prison medical officer: Deterrence, dual loyalty and the production of psychiatric expertise, 1860-1895
4. Criminal or lunatic, prisoner of patient?: Confining insanity in the late nineteenth century
5. 'He puts on symptoms of incoherence': Feigning and detecting insanity in nineteenth-century prisons
6. Conclusion: The decline of the separate system, the prisoner patient and enduring legacies
Bibliography
Index.

Subject Areas: British & Irish history [HBJD1], European history [HBJD], Regional & national history [HBJ], History [HB], Humanities [H]

View full details