Dressing and addressing the mental patient: The uses of clothing in the admission, care and employment of residents in English Provincial Mental Hospitals, c. 1860–1960

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Abstract

Scholars of insanity and its historical antecedents have paid very little attention to personal and institutional clothing. Such dress, distributed to patients in mental institutions, has always been inscribed with the conflicting narratives of the period in which it was made and worn. The language of civil and medical authority is more evident than personal choice in the shape and address of the attire. This article examines clothing worn by patients in three Devon mental hospitals during the century before 1960. We consider the ways in which institutional clothing formed part of a hospital regimen of overt control, as well as suiting considerations of economy and employment that figured in these institutions.

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Baur, N., & Melling, J. (2014). Dressing and addressing the mental patient: The uses of clothing in the admission, care and employment of residents in English Provincial Mental Hospitals, c. 1860–1960. Textile History, 45(2), 145–170. https://doi.org/10.1179/0040496914Z.00000000045

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