« Post-Colonial Perspectives in the History of
Medicine »
co-organisée par le
Professeur David Wright (Institute for Health and Social Policy, McGill
University) et Laurence Monnais (Chaire de Recherche du
Canada sur le pluralisme en santé, UdeM)
Labor as Therapy:
Agricultural Colonies and the Re-education of the 'Insane' in French Indochina
Claire Edington, Columbia University (USA)
Résumé: Strategies for the rehabilitation of the mentally ill in French
Indochina were founded on beliefs in the therapeutic value of labor and the
construction of large agricultural colonies adjacent to asylum grounds.
Championed by colonial experts who drew on a rich psychiatric discourse in the
metropole about the virtues of patient employment, the ‘colonies agricoles’
seemed to offer a modern conception of mental health care that promised not only
"cerebral hygiene" and discipline through physical labor but also, in simulating
the appearance of freedom, a kind of moral re-education. Drawing on annual
asylum reports spanning the interwar years, I will discuss the ways in which
colonial psychiatrists framed the therapeutic and economic imperatives for
labor, and how they came to articulate a vision of psychiatric rehabilitation
which blurred the distinction between patients and laborers, between
institutional order and the organization of social life beyond the
asylum.
La conférence se tiendra mardi
prochain, le 16 octobre 2012, de 15h à 16h30 à l’Université de Montréal au
Carrefour des arts et des sciences (Pavillon Lionel-Groulx, 3150 Jean-Brillant,
salle C-3061).
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