In Search of Madness
eBook - ePub

In Search of Madness

A Psychiatrist's Travels Through the History of Mental Illness

  1. 336 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

In Search of Madness

A Psychiatrist's Travels Through the History of Mental Illness

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

Who is 'Mad'? Who is Not? And Who Decides?

In this fascinating new exploration of mental illness, Professor Brendan Kelly examines 'madness' in history and how we have responded to it over the centuries.

We travel from the psychiatric institutions of modern India to scientific studies of the brain in Victorian England. We discover the beginnings of formal asylum care and witness the experimental therapies of the cavernous psychiatric hospitals of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in Ireland, England, Belgium, Italy, Germany and the United States.

Covering lobotomy and the Nazis' Aktion T4 campaign, as well as Freud, psychoanalysis, cognitive behavioural therapy and neuroscience, In Search of Madness examines the shift in recent times from 'psychobabble' to 'neurobabble'.

This is an all encompassing history of one of the most basic fears to haunt the human psyche – madness – and it concludes with a passionate manifesto for change: four proposals to make mental health services more effective, accessible and just.

Frequently asked questions

Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on “Cancel Subscription” - it’s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time you’ve paid for. Learn more here.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlego’s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan you’ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes, you can access In Search of Madness by Brendan Kelly in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & World History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Gill Books
Year
2022
ISBN
9780717193790
Topic
History
Index
History
Chapter 1
Psychiatry: Haunted by Institutions
I first meet John in a psychiatry outpatient clinic in Ireland. I am the new psychiatrist and John is a long-standing patient of the mental health service. John is in his sixties when I meet him. Four decades earlier, he spent 22 years in the local ‘mental hospital’, diagnosed with schizophrenia. John’s old case notes strongly support this diagnosis. He was clearly very mentally ill at the outset: hearing voices, believing his food was poisoned and insisting that the radio was talking about him.
John was discharged from the hospital 18 years ago when a community residence operated by the mental health service opened on a nearby street. He has lived there ever since. At the community residence, John is free to come and go as he pleases. Mental health staff call in three times a week to check how the residents are getting on and help solve any problems they might have. The staff know John and the other residents very well.
John is receiving long-term treatment with antipsychotic medication administered by injection once every four weeks. He has not required hospital admission at any point following his discharge to the community residence. None of the residents have been admitted. Neighbours comment that theirs is the quietest house on the street.
When I first meet John, I ask what he thinks about the monthly injection. He says: ‘I’ve been on it for 30 years. It’s part of my life. Is that all, doctor? Can I go now?’ And off he goes, out of the clinic – until next month.
I discuss John with the community mental health nurse on our team. She tells me that, despite great efforts by the social worker and occupational therapist, all that John wants to do is to walk around the local neighbourhood during the day and visit the hospital in the evenings. There, he has tea with long-stay patients and long-term staff members whom he knows, before returning to the community residence where he lives. He sometimes says he wishes he was still in hospital.
John does not seem unhappy, but his life seems rather limited to me, shaped in part by mental illness, but also by prolonged institutionalisation as a young man. While John might have initially required hospitalisation all those years ago, surely his 22-year hospital stay dampened his personality and limited his horizons in the longer term? While he certainly has a diagnosis of schizophrenia, did his early institutional treatment prove worse than his illness? And why was he kept in hospital for so long? Were there no alternatives?
The boy is happy. He looks at me with big dark eyes and an enormous smile. He cannot be more than four years of age and he has no idea who I am, what I want, or why I am standing here. But he is enormously happy to see me. He is seated on a dilapidated motorcycle, eating a tiny banana and watching the world go past. This is the perfect place for people-watching – possibly the best place in the world.
The boy and his family are camped outside the gate of the Mahabodhi Temple in Bodh Gaya in northern India. This is where Buddha attained enlightenment during a night of meditation under the Bodhi tree, two-and-a-half thousand years ago.
They still have the tree. As a result, the tiny town of Bodh Gaya is crammed with pilgrims, spiritual tourists and curious travellers, all filing past the boy, his family and countless other street-traders, on their way to the temple to see if they, too, can be enlightened under the sacred tree. There are stray dogs in the middle of the road, sacred cows ambling about, camels conveying travellers from afar, and even cages of birds to buy and release moments later, as an offering to the gods – ‘good karma’. The entire scene is loud, dusty and oddly intoxicating. I love it.
I stop beside the boy because his father is selling carved wooden Buddhas unlike any I have seen before. Buddha is in a skeletal state during an ascetic phase prior to his enlightenment, when he virtually starved himself to death in search of wisdom. You can see Buddha’s ribs jutting through his skin, his face gaunt, his eyes haunted. Despite his best efforts, Buddha remains unfulfilled at this early stage on his spiritual journey. I buy the carving for a tiny sum, smile at the boy and move on. Enlightenment awaits, just beyond the security barrier and the seething crowd.
To tell the truth, I have not come to India in search of spiritual enlightenment, although I’ll take that willingly if I find it. No, I’ve come in search of ‘madness’.
Mine is a peculiar quest. As a psychiatrist, I often use the term ‘mental illness’ when I see someone who is distressed and disturbed and needs to seek help outside their own personal resources, beyond their circle of family and friends. I’ve seen thousands, maybe tens of thousands, of such people over the past 25 years and, even so, I still do not know fully what ‘mental illness’ really means to many people.
But I do know that while the terminology changes over time – ‘madness’, ‘insanity’, ‘mental disorder’ – the fact of psychological suffering remains remarkably constant. It is real. My goal in this book is to dig more deeply into this psychological suffering, to see how our understanding of it changes with time and geography, and – hopefully – to figure out how we can better help people with mental illness.
But, for now, I sit here under the Bodhi tree in Bodh Gaya and wait to be enlightened. Nothing happens.
Gods, Demons and Supernatural Forces: The Prehistory of Mental Illness
The prehistory of ‘madness’ takes us back to earliest times.1 Mental illness has always been with us. Every spiritual tradition has, at one time or other, blamed human ‘madness’ on the work of gods or devils, or the result of supernatural forces that sought to disturb the affairs of man, wreak havoc or exert revenge for unspecified infringements. Sometimes ‘madness’ was the result of obvious wrong-doing, sometimes the vagaries of the deities, sometimes just bad luck. Responses were often harsh: while some who ‘heard voices’ were hailed as saints or mystics, most were dismissed as mad, persecuted, confined, ostracised or constrained to lives of wandering, loneliness, destitution and early death.
Attitudes changed over time but did not necessarily improve. In Greek tradition, soldiers were occasionally seized with the ‘madness’ of war, and illnesses such as mania, melancholia and epilepsy began to appear in the literature. A shift occurred in medical texts written in the tradition of Hippocrates (c.460–c.370 BCE), a Greek physician, when his followers spoke of ‘hysteria’ as a form of mental illness in women. They linked this to the womb rather than to the gods or the uncontrollable forces of fate.
Hippocrates and his followers developed the idea of the four ‘humours’: black bile, yellow bile, phlegm and blood. Health resulted when the humours were in balance, and disease resulted when the balance was disturbed.
Hippocrates placed particular emphasis on the role of the brain in generating emotions, knowledge, perceptions and our responses to the world:
Men ought to know that from nothing else but thence [the brain] come joys, despondency and lamentations. And by this, in an especial manner, we acquire wisdom, and knowledge, and see and hear, and know what are foul and what are fair, what are bad and what are good, what are sweet, and what unsavoury; some we discriminate by habit, and some we perceive by their utility. By this we distinguish objects of relish and disrelish, according to the seasons; and the same things do not always please us.
But, according to Hippocrates, the brain was also responsible for ‘madness’:
And by the same organ we become mad and delirious, and fears and terrors assail us, some by night and some by day; and dreams and untimely wanderings, and cares that are not suitable, and ignorance of present circumstances, desuetude and unskilfulness. All these things we endure from the brain when it is not healthy, but is more hot, more cold, more moist, or more dry, than natural, or when it suffers any other preternatural and unusual affection.
And we become mad from humidity [of the brain]. For when it is more moist than natural, it is necessarily put into motion, and the affected part being moved, neither the sight nor hearing can be at rest, and the tongue speaks in accordance with the sight and hearing.
The key, according to Hippocrates, lay in maintaining a balance between ‘rest’ and activity of the brain, and the balance of the humours:
As long as the brain is at rest the man enjoys his reason; but the depravement of the brain arises from phlegm and bile, either of which you may recognise in this manner: those who are mad from phlegm are quiet, and do not cry out or make a noise; but those from bile are vociferous, malignant, and will not be quiet, but are always doing something improper.
If the madness be constant, these are the causes thereof. But if terrors and fears assail, they are connected with derangement of the brain, and derangement is owing to its being heated. And it is heated by bile when it is determined to the brain along the blood vessels running from the trunk, and fear is present until it return again to the veins and trunk, when it ceases. He is grieved and troubled when the brain is unseasonably cooled, and contracted beyond its wont. It suffers this from phlegm; and from the same affection the patient becomes oblivious.
From this point on, mental illness was increasingly located in the body and the brain, and in the humours, rather than in the heavens.
But where did this medicalisation of ‘madness’ leave religious explanations, folk traditions and local cures, such as spells, charms and incantations? Cultural beliefs, once evolved, are notoriously difficult to abandon. Moreover, there were now flourishing markets in cures for ‘madness’, with significant vested interests.
Tensions between folkloric and medical explanations of ‘madness’ in the Greek and Roman worlds were echoed in other civilisations. In China, demonic possession and disturbances to cosmic forces were commonly invoked to explain ‘madness’, but existed alongside physical causes such as cold, damp and wind. In Islamic tradition, folkloric tales and supernatural therapies abounded in popular culture, but the extensive Islamic hospitals of the eighth century also made specific ‘medical’ provision for the ‘insane’. The first mental hospital was reputedly built in Baghdad in 705.2 Early treatments included baths, music and occupational therapy.3 In many places, blood-letting, vomiting, purging, opium and herbs were also used to expel noxious ‘humours’ causing mental illness, along with physical restraint and beating, aimed at quelling furious ‘insanity’.
This composite picture – folk remedies mingling with ‘scientific’ advances, medical treatments coupled with unflinching social control – was to persist for many centuries, even through the asylum era of the nineteenth century and the reformation of the ‘mental hospitals’ in the twentieth. Today, similar controversies still rage about treatment, responsibility and exploitation of the mentally ill, reflecting continued tension between medical and social dimensions of ‘madness’. All of this weighs heavily on my mind during my travels in India in search of the story of psychiatry.
Back in my hotel near Bodh Gaya, the Times of India reports that a Mumbai schoolboy died by suicide after he was suspended from school for allegedly beating up a classmate. The boy’s parents blame the school principal and teachers, but the High Court concludes that they are not responsible. The Court says that while the suicide was deeply tragic, there is no evidence that school staff abetted or instigated it.
The challenges presented by mental illness have always been common, complex and costly in both human and economic terms. I console myself today with other distracting news in the Indian press: enthusiastic reports about economic successes, endless accounts of social initiatives, and articles on health and lifestyle. But psychological concerns are rarely far from the surface: even the serious-sounding Economic Times has a column called ‘The Speaking Tree’ with psychological advice for readers.
I turn to other sections of the newspapers in search of lighter fare. The Times of India breezily advises readers to switch to natural gas: ‘If you care, change the air’. This enhanced awareness of the environment might not be quite the enlightenment of which the Buddha spoke, but it’s plenty for me this evening – along with some tongue-tingling Indian food and a restless night’s sleep, punctuated by dreams about the cavernous asylums of the nineteenth century, a calmly starving Buddha, and a camel dozing gently under the sacred Bodhi tree.
Institutions, Innovations and Forgetting
The Central Institute of Psychiatry in Ranchi in northern India is an impressive place and an excellent starting point for my exploration of psychiatric institutions. I don’t know quite what I am searching for, but I hope I’ll know when I find it. Maybe it’s here, in Ranchi.
Prior to the nineteenth century, care for the mentally ill in most countries was patchy and uneven, if it existed at all. The development of this field in India reflects many aspects of the broader history of psychiatry around the world. That is why I am here.
In India, ancient traditions linked disease with diet, and Unani medicine included Ilaj-I-Nafsani as a form of psychotherapy.4 Other practices offered variable degrees of support in certain parts of the country, and there were early hospitals for people with mental illness during the reign of King Asoka (268–232 BCE). Later, British colonisation resulted in the creation of asylums to cater primarily for European people who became mentally ill. This system of Indian asylums developed considerably over time and soon became a complex but integral part of the colonial enterprise.
Ranchi European Lunatic Asylum, as it was then named, was established by the British on 17 May 1918 when they realised that the mental asylums at Bhowanipore and Berhampore in Bengal were in very poor condition and increasingly crowded with European patients. In 1919, Lieutenant Colonel Owen Berkeley-Hill, a psychiatrist in the British Army, became medical superintendent here and, in 1924, wrote:
The Ranchi European Mental Hospital is the only mental hospital in India which is intended solely for the treatment of persons of either European or American parentage. Natives of Asia or Africa are not eligible for admission. The term European includes persons of mixed parentage, i.e., Anglo-Indian or Anglo-African, and to the former the largest percentage of patients belongs.
The hospital at Ranchi was part of an extraordinary wave of asylum-building that swept across much of the world in the late nineteenth and early twentieth c...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Dedication
  4. Contents
  5. A Note on Language
  6. Content Warning
  7. Introduction: What Is Mental Illness?
  8. 1. Psychiatry: Haunted by Institutions
  9. 2. Depression: Anatomy of Melancholy
  10. 3. Manic Depression: The Roots of Diagnosis
  11. 4. Schizophrenia: Misunderstanding Mental Illness
  12. 5. Treatments: Managing Mental Disorder in the Past
  13. 6. Mental Healthcare: From Institutions to Neglect
  14. 7. Psychiatry: From Psychobabble to Neurobabble
  15. 8. Mental Health and Mental Illness: A Manifesto
  16. Recommended Further Reading
  17. Permissions
  18. Notes
  19. Acknowledgements
  20. Copyright
  21. About the Author
  22. About Gill Books