
Contents
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Becoming a Lunatic Becoming a Lunatic
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Confinement Confinement
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Securing Pension Relief Securing Pension Relief
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Aftermath Aftermath
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Three An Incurable Lunatic: Pension Politics in the Struggle for Respectability
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Published:August 2017
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Abstract
In the postbellum nineteenth century, institutional support for the families of the mentally ill was far less available than it would be a century later. People in these circumstances had only their own resources to depend on and perhaps the assistance they could draw up from relatives and friends. This chapter demonstrates the extent to which insanity not only separated individuals so identified from the rest of the community by institutionalizing them but also placed the families of the insane in an ambiguous status that required cultural and organizational negotiation. It presents the previously unexamined history of one family that illuminates many of the challenges that other families, individuals, and communities faced at the time. The story traces the life of a man who fought for his country, moved west with the expanding frontier, experienced a modicum of success, raised a family, and then became an incurable lunatic.
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