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Bedlam at Botany Bay / James Dunk.

Bedlam at Botany Bay / James Dunk.
Item Information
Shelf Location Collection Volume Ref. Branch Status Due Date
616.89 DUNK
Adult Non Fiction   Bankstown . . Available .  
. Catalogue Record 1172561 ItemInfo . Catalogue Record 1172561 ItemInfo Top of page .
Catalogue Information
Field name Details
ISBN 9781742236179 (paperback)
Name Dunk, James author.
Title Bedlam at Botany Bay / James Dunk.
Published Sydney, NSW : NewSouth Publishing, UNSW Press Ltd., 2019.
©2019
Description x, 306 pages ; 24 cm
Notes Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary What happened when people went mad in the fledgling colony of New South Wales? In this important new history of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, we find out through the correspondence of tireless colonial secretaries, the brazen language of lawyers and judges and firebrand politicians, and heartbreaking letters from siblings, parents and friends. We also hear from the mad themselves. Class, gender and race became irrelevant as illness, chaos and delusion afflicted convicts exiled from their homes and living under the weight of imperial justice; ex-convicts and small settlers as they grappled with the country they had taken from its Indigenous inhabitants, as well as officers, officials and wealthy colonists who sought to guide the course of European history in Australia. This not a history of the miserable institutions built for the mentally ill, or those living within them, or the people in charge of the asylums. These stories of madness are woven together into a narrative about freedom and possibilities, and collapse and unravelling. The book looks at people at the edge of the world finding themselves at the edge of sanity, and is about their strategies for survival. This is a new story of colonial Australia, cast as neither a grim and fatal shore nor an antipodean paradise, but a place where the full range of humanity wrestled with the challenges of colonisation. The first book-length history of madness at the beginning of European Australia. Original and evocative, it grapples seriously with the place ofmadness in Australia's convict history The book's intimate descriptions of madness and the response to itgive a unique picture of life in the early colony through the lens ofmental illness Awareness of mental health continues to rise globally. This book explores efforts to understand and to treat madness before asylums, hospitals and doctors made madness a medical problem. Meticulously researched by James Dunk, a young emerging historian of medicine and colonialism.
Subjects Mental health -- Australia
Mental health -- Treatment
New South Wales -- History -- 18th century
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Catalogue Information 1172561 . Catalogue Information 1172561 Top of page .
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