Documenting insanity: Paperwork and patient narratives in psychiatric history

History of the Human Sciences 35 (3-4):3-31 (2022)
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Abstract

Paperwork plays a key role in a how institutions accommodate, refuse, or manage disabled people. This article develops modes for reading paperwork that build on each other, beginning with (a) recognizing the institutional pressures at work in shaping bureaucratic practices, then (b) considering how a person's relationship to disability influences how they might encounter these practices, and ultimately (c) noticing how the encounter between disabled/mad people and an institution might create something new, what the author calls archival excess. These methods for reading are in conversation with disability studies, medical humanities, and document studies, and ultimately work toward a goal adapted from the principles of Disability Justice: recognizing the wholeness of disabled subjects in institutional archives.

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References found in this work

The taming of chance.Ian Hacking - 1990 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
Archive fever: a Freudian impression.Jacques Derrida - 1996 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

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