Description
Disorder Contained provides a comprehensive historical analysis of how mental illness was managed within Victorian prisons across England and Ireland from 1840 to 1900. Authors Catherine Cox and Hilary Marland investigate the complex intersection of criminality, mental disorder, and institutional responses during a period of significant social change.
The book examines archival records, medical documents, and prison reports to reveal how prison authorities identified, classified, and treated mentally ill prisoners. It explores the tensions between punitive justice systems and emerging psychiatric understanding, documenting the development of specialized facilities and medical interventions within prisons.
Cox and Marland’s research illuminates the experiences of vulnerable populations confined in Victorian prisons and the gradual recognition that mental illness required distinct treatment approaches. The work contributes important insights into the history of psychiatry, criminal justice, and institutional care during the nineteenth century.







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