“以鹅开始,以鹅结束”:1824-1832年英格拉姆诉怀亚特案中对低能的医学、法律和世俗理解。

M. Jackson
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引用次数: 10

摘要

一些历史学家最近提出,如果我们要完全理解19世纪人们对精神错乱的态度,我们就需要走出精神病院。最近的研究认为,对疯狂的医学化的描述忽视了对精神错乱和愚蠢的非医学态度的重要性,强调有必要更详细地探讨家庭的态度和反应。不幸的是,逃离收容所的努力在某种程度上受到持续依赖收容机构记录的阻碍。这种对制度的依赖是可以理解的:精神错乱的证明、接收令、个案簿和庇护登记簿,连同已发表的文件,构成了关于疯子和白痴思想的历史建构的主要记录。然而,可能有更机智的方法来探索医学和非医学对白痴的态度。在本文中,我想用一个有争议的遗嘱案件的记录,英格拉姆诉怀亚特,来证明来自教会法院的记录可以提供进入一个领域的途径,在这个领域中,白痴和弱智的定义和含义被律师、非专业证人、法官和医生例行地考虑。我认为,这些案例构成了一个富有成效的场所,可以挖掘外行、专业法律和医学对弱智的态度,探索医学和非医学对能力的理解之间的复杂关系,并将这些理解置于法律和医学的专业发展以及当代对遗产的关注的背景下。
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'It begins with the goose and ends with the goose': medical, legal, and lay understandings of imbecility in Ingram v Wyatt, 1824-1832.
A number of historians have recently suggested that we need to get out of the asylum if we are to fully understand attitudes to insanity in the nineteenth century. Arguing that accounts of the medicalization of madness have ignored the importance of non-medical attitudes to lunacy and idiocy, recent studies have stressed the need to explore family attitudes and responses in more detail. Unfortunately, efforts to escape the asylum have to some extent been hampered by a persistent reliance on institutional records. This institutional dependence is understandable: certificates of insanity, reception orders, case-books, and asylum registers, together with published documents, constitute the major record of historical constructions of the lunatic and idiotic mind. However, there may be more resourceful ways of exploring both medical and non-medical attitudes to idiocy. In this paper, I want to use the records from a contested will case, Ingram v Wyatt, to demonstrate that records from the ecclesiastical courts can provide access to a domain where the definitions and meanings of idiocy and imbecility were routinely considered by lawyers, lay witnesses, judges, and doctors. I shall argue that such cases constitute a fruitful site for excavating lay, professional legal, and medical attitudes to imbecility, for exploring the complex relationship between medical and non-medical understandings of capacity, and for situating those understandings within the context of professional developments in law and medicine and contemporary concerns about inheritance.
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