Literature DB >> 26379371

Political dimensions of 'the psychosocial': The 1948 International Congress on Mental Health and the Mental Hygiene Movement.

Jonathan Toms.   

Abstract

The Foucauldian sociologist Nikolas Rose has influentially argued that psychosocial technologies have offered means through which the ideals of democracy can be made congruent with the management of social life and the government of citizens in modern Western liberal democracies. This interpretation is contested here through an examination of the 1948 International Congress on Mental Health held in London and the mental hygiene movement that organised it. It is argued that, in Britain, this movement's theory and practice represents an uneasy and ambiguous attempt to reconcile visions of 'the modern' with 'the traditional'. The mental hygienist emphasis on the family is central. Here it appears as a forcing-house of the modern self-sustaining individual. Mental hygienists cast the social organisation of 'traditional' communities as static, with rigid authority frustrating both social progress and the full emergence of individual personality. Yet mental hygienists were also concerned about threats to social cohesion and secure personhood under modernity. If the social organisation of 'traditional' communities was patterned by the archetype of the family, with its personal relations of authority, mental hygienists compressed these relations into the 'private' family. Situated here they became part of a developmental process of mental adjustment through which 'mature', responsible citizens emerged. This reformulation of the family's centrality for the social order informed mental hygienist critiques of the growth of state power under existing forms of democracy, as well as suspicion of popular political participation or protest, and of movements towards greater egalitarianism.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Democracy; Michel Foucault; mental health; mental hygiene; psychosocial

Year:  2012        PMID: 26379371      PMCID: PMC4568312          DOI: 10.1177/0952695112470044

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hist Human Sci        ISSN: 0952-6951            Impact factor:   0.690


  4 in total

1.  Psychosocial determinants of health in social epidemiology.

Authors:  Pekka Martikainen; Mel Bartley; Eero Lahelma
Journal:  Int J Epidemiol       Date:  2002-12       Impact factor: 7.196

2.  PRIMITIVE MAN AND THE MODERN PATIENT.

Authors:  H Crichton-Miller
Journal:  Br Med J       Date:  1932-09-03

3.  The Value of Social Service in the Out-Patient Treatment of Mental Disorder.

Authors:  St Clair Townsend
Journal:  Ment Welf       Date:  1925-04-15

4.  Habit Formation.

Authors:  R G Gordon
Journal:  Ment Welf       Date:  1933-04-15
  4 in total
  2 in total

1.  "All emigrants are up to the physical, mental, and moral standards required": A tale of two child rescue schemes.

Authors:  Wendy Sims-Schouten; Paul Weindling
Journal:  J Hist Behav Sci       Date:  2022-02-08

2.  'A troublesome girl is pushed through': Morality, biological determinism, resistance, resilience, and the Canadian child migration schemes, 1883-1939.

Authors:  Wendy Sims-Schouten
Journal:  Hist Human Sci       Date:  2021-09-14       Impact factor: 0.690

  2 in total

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