Shattered minds: Controlling the body in the lunatic asylums in colonial India (1858-1920)
DOI
Access Status
This content is available to Open Access.
To download content simply use the links provided under the Files section.
More information about licence and terms of use for this content is available in the Rights section.
Type
Article
Date
2018-03
Journal Title
Karatoya : North Bengal University journal of History
Journal Editor
Bhattacharya, Dahlia
Mondal, Amrita
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of North Bengal
Statistics
Total views and downloads
Views
160Downloads
466Citation
Bhattacharya, D. (2018). Shattered minds: Controlling the body in the lunatic asylums in colonial India (1858-1920). Karatoya : North Bengal University Journal of History, 11, 165–182. https://ir.nbu.ac.in/handle/123456789/3944
Authors
Bhattacharya, Dahlia
Advisor
Editor
Abstract
Taming with discipline and confinement the ‘mentally ill’ was largely a colonial concept.
The colonial government particularly after 1857 revolt became more concerned about
the insane and in controlling insanity they passed Lunatic Acts and constructed asylums
throughout the country. In identifying the lunatics the colonial institution used Victorian
morality rather than clinical observation. The vagrants and beggars were the mostly
classified as insane by the British which was in contrary to the Indian concept of saints
and sages. The ganja smokers, hemp and alcohol addicted men were also identified as
lunatics. The Victorian morality recognized ‘work’ as a therapy and the ‘mentally ill’
were made to work in the garden, carpentry, grinding wheat and other works leading to
monetary gain. The funds were applied to maintain the asylums, sometimes the local jails
and led to profit for the British. The paper seeks to look into the colonial policy towards
the asylums and the hard work imposed upon the lunatics leading to asylum ‘industries’
and how it received a new direction of economic gains.
Description
Citation
Accession No
Call No
Book Title
Edition
Volume
ISBN No
Volume Number
11
Issue Number
ISSN No
2229-4880
eISSN No
Pages
Pages
165 - 182