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  5. “He Must Die or Go Mad in This Place”: Prisoners, Insanity, and the Pentonville Model Prison Experiment,1842–52
 
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“He Must Die or Go Mad in This Place”: Prisoners, Insanity, and the Pentonville Model Prison Experiment,1842–52

Author(s)
Cox, Catherine  
Marland, Hilary  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/9963
Date Issued
2018-03
Date Available
2019-04-16T08:06:36Z
Abstract
The relationship between prisons and mental illness has preoccupied prison administrators, physicians, and reformers from the establishment of the modern prison service in the nineteenth century to the current day. Here we take the case of Pentonville Model Prison, established in 1842 with the aim of reforming convicts through religious exhortation, rigorous discipline and training, and the imposition of separate confinement in its most extreme form. Our article demonstrates how following the introduction of separate confinement, the prison chaplains rather than the medical officers took a lead role in managing the minds of convicts. However, instead of reforming and improving prisoners’ minds, Pentonville became associated with high rates of mental disorder, challenging the institution’s regime and reputation. We explore the role of chaplains, doctors, and other prison officers in debating, disputing, and managing cases of mental breakdown and the dismantling of separate confinement in the face of mounting criticism.
Other Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Johns Hopkins University Press
Journal
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Volume
92
Issue
1
Start Page
78
End Page
109
Copyright (Published Version)
2018 the Authors
Subjects

Pentonville Prison

Separate confinement

Insanity

Chaplains

Doctors

Experiments

Feigning

DOI
10.1353/bhm.2018.0004
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name

BulletinHistoryMedicine.pdf

Size

392.25 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

4ccd0df3eddbf6ed4e8dcdeff4d57d6d

Owning collection
History Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

For all queries please contact research.repository@ucd.ie.

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