Middle-class Fathers, Sons, and Mental Illness in Late Victorian and Edwardian England

Pub Date : 2024-03-25 DOI:10.1177/03631990241240487
L. Ugolini
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Abstract

This article explores the impact of mental illness on the relationship between middle-class fathers and sons in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century England. Using sources that include autobiographies, oral histories, press reports of violence, and records of appeals against conscription, the article argues that shame was not the dominant reaction. Many mentally ill men lost masculine status and agency within the family, but both fathers and sons were much more likely to respond to illness with loving concern, attempts at negotiation and pacification, than to use their power over vulnerable relatives with attempts to confine and hide them from sight.
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维多利亚晚期和爱德华时代英国中产阶级的父亲、儿子和精神疾病
本文探讨了精神病对十九世纪末二十世纪初英国中产阶级父子关系的影响。文章利用包括自传、口述历史、暴力事件的新闻报道以及反对征兵的呼吁记录在内的资料,论证了羞耻并不是主要的反应。许多患有精神疾病的男性在家庭中失去了男性的地位和权力,但父亲和儿子都更有可能以关爱、协商和安抚的方式来应对疾病,而不是利用他们对弱势亲属的权力,试图禁锢和隐藏他们。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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