Mad-doctors in the dock : defending the diagnosis, 1760-1913
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Mad-doctors in the dock : defending the diagnosis, 1760-1913
Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016
- : hardcover
Available at 3 libraries
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  Okinawa
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Shortly before she pushed her infant daughter headfirst into a bucket of water and fastened the lid, Annie Cherry warmed the pail because, as she later explained to a police officer, "It would have been cruel to put her in cold water." Afterwards, this mother sat down and poured herself a cup of tea. At Cherry's trial at the Old Bailey in 1877, Henry Charlton Bastian, physician to the National Hospital for the Paralyzed and Epileptic, focused his testimony on her preternatural calm following the drowning. Like many other late Victorian medical men, Bastian believed that the mother's act and her subsequent behavior indicated homicidal mania, a novel species of madness that challenged the law's criterion for assigning criminal culpability. How did Dr. Bastian and his cohort of London's physicians, surgeons, and apothecaries-originally known as "mad-doctors"-arrive at such an innovative diagnosis, and how did they defend it in court? Mad-Doctors in the Dock is a sophisticated exploration of the history of the insanity defense in the English courtroom from the middle of the eighteenth century to the early twentieth century.
Joel Peter Eigen examines courtroom testimony offered in nearly 1,000 insanity trials, transporting us into the world of psychiatric diagnosis and criminal justice. The first comprehensive account of how medical insight and folk psychology met in the courtroom, this book makes clear the tragedy of the crimes, the spectacle of the trials, and the consequences of the diagnosis for the emerging field of forensic psychiatry.
Table of Contents
Preface Introduction Chapter 1. Nasty, Brutish, and Short: Criminal Trials before the Lawyer Chapter 2. Delusion and Its Discontents Chapter 3.When Practitioners Become Professionals: The Alienists' Claim to KnowledgeChapter 4. The Diagnosis in the Dock Chapter 5. The Witness Takes the Stand Chapter 6. Homicidal Mania: Provenance and Cultural Context Chapter 7. The View from the Bench: Judicial Discretion and Forensic-Psychiatric Evidence Conclusion. On the Origins of Diagnosis Notes Index
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