Description

Book Synopsis

What would bring a physician to conclude that sterilization is appropriate treatment for the mentally ill and mentally handicapped? Using archival sources, Ian Robert Dowbiggin documents the involvement of both American and Canadian psychiatrists in...



Trade Review

A valuable and meticulously documented study.

-- William H. Tucker, PhD * JAMA *

It would be accurate to state that a majority of late-19th- and early-20th-century scientists, particularly social scientists, were favorably inclined toward eugenics.... Pressure from government bureaucrats, public alarm over the mental health of new immigrants, and the dispiriting experience of practicing within the state mental hospital led individual psychiatrists to sanction the eugenics movement.... Dowbiggin ably tells this story.

* Choice *

Too often the treatments of eugenics are incomplete, simplistic, and misinformed. One would hope that those authors will read Ian Dowbiggin's history of eugenics in the United States and Canada so that they might correct or enrich their own accounts. In this archive-based history, Dowbiggin, a historian of psychiatry, focuses on the roles that psychiatry played in the eugenics movement. The author seeks to understand why psychiatrists endorsed eugenics, what eugenics programs they advocated, why they lost faith in eugenics and what role they played in the eventual passage of eugenics laws. These and other questions are answered in this very readable account.... This book offers readers two histories woven into one story: the eugenics movement in North America and the 20th century transformation of psychiatry.... A well-researched account. The history of eugenics is redefined in this outstanding book that draws on a rich analysis of behavior, medicine, politics, and culture.

-- Ludy T. Benjamin Jr. * American Scientist *

Given the role that medical practitioners play in influencing public debate on health care, Ian Dowbiggin's Keeping America Sane provides a much-needed cautionary tale. Rather than arguing that North American psychiatrists mainly represented their class, Dowbiggin demonstrates the extent to which psychiatric support for eugenics was located within their own professional self-interest.... As Dowbiggin describes it, the story of eugenics in North America is one of human fallibility, of good people advocating abuses of basic human rights for the very best reasons.... Keeping America Sane is a much needed addition to Canadian and American medical history.

* The Canadian Historical Review *

Keeping America Sane is a valuable addition to the still small number of first-rate studies we possess of any aspect of the history of twentieth-century psychiatry.... This is a well-researched and original monograph that deserves a warm welcome.... It sets a high standard for the new series of Cornell Studies in the History of Psychiatry.

* Medical History *

No other author... has produced such a close and empathetic analysis of the profession's inhouse squabbles.... Ian Dowbiggin has produced a useful portrait of North American psychiatry and its relations with eugenics.

* The International History Review *

Keeping America Sane Psychiatry and Eugenics in

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    A Paperback / softback by Ian Robert Dowbiggin

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      View other formats and editions of Keeping America Sane Psychiatry and Eugenics in by Ian Robert Dowbiggin

      Publisher: Cornell University Press
      Publication Date: 27/03/2003
      ISBN13: 9780801483981, 978-0801483981
      ISBN10: 0801483980

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      What would bring a physician to conclude that sterilization is appropriate treatment for the mentally ill and mentally handicapped? Using archival sources, Ian Robert Dowbiggin documents the involvement of both American and Canadian psychiatrists in...



      Trade Review

      A valuable and meticulously documented study.

      -- William H. Tucker, PhD * JAMA *

      It would be accurate to state that a majority of late-19th- and early-20th-century scientists, particularly social scientists, were favorably inclined toward eugenics.... Pressure from government bureaucrats, public alarm over the mental health of new immigrants, and the dispiriting experience of practicing within the state mental hospital led individual psychiatrists to sanction the eugenics movement.... Dowbiggin ably tells this story.

      * Choice *

      Too often the treatments of eugenics are incomplete, simplistic, and misinformed. One would hope that those authors will read Ian Dowbiggin's history of eugenics in the United States and Canada so that they might correct or enrich their own accounts. In this archive-based history, Dowbiggin, a historian of psychiatry, focuses on the roles that psychiatry played in the eugenics movement. The author seeks to understand why psychiatrists endorsed eugenics, what eugenics programs they advocated, why they lost faith in eugenics and what role they played in the eventual passage of eugenics laws. These and other questions are answered in this very readable account.... This book offers readers two histories woven into one story: the eugenics movement in North America and the 20th century transformation of psychiatry.... A well-researched account. The history of eugenics is redefined in this outstanding book that draws on a rich analysis of behavior, medicine, politics, and culture.

      -- Ludy T. Benjamin Jr. * American Scientist *

      Given the role that medical practitioners play in influencing public debate on health care, Ian Dowbiggin's Keeping America Sane provides a much-needed cautionary tale. Rather than arguing that North American psychiatrists mainly represented their class, Dowbiggin demonstrates the extent to which psychiatric support for eugenics was located within their own professional self-interest.... As Dowbiggin describes it, the story of eugenics in North America is one of human fallibility, of good people advocating abuses of basic human rights for the very best reasons.... Keeping America Sane is a much needed addition to Canadian and American medical history.

      * The Canadian Historical Review *

      Keeping America Sane is a valuable addition to the still small number of first-rate studies we possess of any aspect of the history of twentieth-century psychiatry.... This is a well-researched and original monograph that deserves a warm welcome.... It sets a high standard for the new series of Cornell Studies in the History of Psychiatry.

      * Medical History *

      No other author... has produced such a close and empathetic analysis of the profession's inhouse squabbles.... Ian Dowbiggin has produced a useful portrait of North American psychiatry and its relations with eugenics.

      * The International History Review *

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