Abstract
Nineteenth-century somatic theories of madness required specific types of treatment that focused on the body of the afflicted. This treatment stressed the primacy of caring for the body as a route to curing the mind. Treatment through environment would facilitate a transfer of the salubrious nature of a well-ordered place of treatment to the body and the mind of the lunatic. Therefore, the design of this environment became important as a method of treatment. The architect was to construct a facility ensuring the ordering, in detail, of placement, movement, and perception of the incarcerated. Also, this facility would act as a technology to facilitate the limits and types of bodily activities that would define a person as mad or sane. This article focuses on the architectural discourse of building for sanity.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Edginton, B. (1994). The well-ordered body: the quest for sanity through nineteenth-century asylum architecture. Canadian Bulletin of Medical History = Bulletin Canadien d’histoire de La Médecine, 11(2), 375–386. https://doi.org/10.3138/cbmh.11.2.375
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