Raeburn, Toby (Author)
Sale, Kayla (Author)
Saunders, Paul (Author)
Doyle, Aunty Kerrie (Author)
Past histories charting interactions between British healthcare and Aboriginal Australians have tended to be dominated by broad histological themes such as invasion and colonization. While such descriptions have been vital to modernization and truth telling in Australian historical discourse, this paper investigates the nineteenth century through the modern cultural lens of mental health. We reviewed primary documents, including colonial diaries, church sermons, newspaper articles, medical and burial records, letters, government documents, conference speeches and anthropological journals. Findings revealed six overlapping fields which applied British ideas about mental health to Aboriginal Australians during the nineteenth century. They included military invasion, religion, law, psychological systems, lunatic asylums, and anthropology.
...More
Article
Toby Raeburn;
Carol Liston;
Jarrad Hickmott;
Michelle Cleary;
(2019)
Colonial surgeon Patrick Hill (1794–1852): unacknowledged pioneer of Australian mental healthcare
(/isis/citation/CBB189630676/)
Article
Coleborne, Catharine;
McCarthy, Angela;
(2012)
Health and Place in Historical Perspective: Medicine, Ethnicity, and Colonial Identities
(/isis/citation/CBB001200709/)
Book
Smith, Leonard D.;
(2014)
Insanity, Race and Colonialism: Managing Mental Disorder in the Post-Emancipation British Caribbean, 1838--1914
(/isis/citation/CBB001552801/)
Book
Coleborne, Catharine;
(2010)
Madness in the Family: Insanity and Institutions in the Australasian Colonial World, 1860--1914
(/isis/citation/CBB001031295/)
Book
Catharine Coleborne;
(2015)
Insanity, Identity and Empire: Immigrants and Institutional Confinement in Australia and New Zealand, 1873-1910
(/isis/citation/CBB635057269/)
Book
Sarah Ann Pinto;
(2018)
Lunatic Asylums in Colonial Bombay: Shackled Bodies, Unchained Minds
(/isis/citation/CBB126077328/)
Book
Starbuck, Nicole;
(2013)
Baudin, Napoleon and the Exploration of Australia
(/isis/citation/CBB001201503/)
Book
Dowbiggin, Ian Robert;
(2011)
The Quest for Mental Health: A Tale of Science, Medicine, Scandal, Sorrow, and Mass Society
(/isis/citation/CBB001251120/)
Book
Topp, Leslie Elizabeth;
Moran, James E.;
Andrews, Jonathan;
(2007)
Madness, Architecture and the Built Environment: Psychiatric Spaces in Historical Context
(/isis/citation/CBB000773995/)
Article
N. A. J. Taylor;
(2021)
The Visual Politics of Maralinga: Experiences, (Re)presentations, and Vulnerabilities
(/isis/citation/CBB755235573/)
Book
Peter Dowling;
(2021)
Fatal Contact: How Epidemics Nearly Wiped Out Australia’s First Peoples
(/isis/citation/CBB723225615/)
Article
Jacqueline Leckie;
(2021)
Infrastructure and ‘Magic Bullets’ in Mental Health in the Colonial Pacific
(/isis/citation/CBB504336419/)
Article
Philippa Martyr;
Sophie Davison;
(2018)
Aboriginal People in Western Australian Mental Hospitals, 1903–1966
(/isis/citation/CBB420757965/)
Book
Heaton, Matthew M.;
(2013)
Black Skin, White Coats: Nigerian Psychiatrists, Decolonization, and the Globalization of Psychiatry
(/isis/citation/CBB001202372/)
Book
Jackson, Lynette;
(2005)
Surfacing Up: Psychiatry and Social Order in Colonial Zimbabwe, 1908--1968
(/isis/citation/CBB000742139/)
Book
Ernst, Waltraud;
(2013)
Colonialism and Transnational Psychiatry: The Development of an Indian Mental Hospital in British India, c. 1925--1940
(/isis/citation/CBB001550994/)
Article
Pringle, Yolana;
(2015)
Investigating “Mass Hysteria” in Early Postcolonial Uganda: Benjamin H. Kagwa, East African Psychiatry, and the Gisu
(/isis/citation/CBB001550602/)
Article
Rowse, Tim;
Shellam, Tiffany;
(2013)
The Colonial Emergence of a Statistical Imaginary
(/isis/citation/CBB001201830/)
Article
Ruth A. Morgan;
(2021)
Health, Hearth and Empire: Climate, Race and Reproduction in British India and Western Australia
(/isis/citation/CBB145766431/)
Article
SELBY HEARTH;
(2024)
Geologists as Colonial Scouts: The Rogers Expedition to Otavi and Tsumeb, Namibia, 1892–1895
(/isis/citation/CBB799232063/)
Be the first to comment!