Insanity, identity and empire examines the formation of colonial
social identities inside the institutions for the insane in Australia
and New Zealand. Taking a large sample of patient records, it pays
particular attention to gender, ethnicity and class as categories of
analysis, reminding us of the varied journeys of immigrants to the
colonies and of how and where they stopped, for different reasons,
inside the social institutions of the period. It is about their stories
of mobility, how these were told and produced inside institutions for
the insane, and how, in the telling, colonial identities were asserted
and formed. Having engaged with the structural imperatives of empire and
with the varied imperial meanings of gender, sexuality and medicine,
historians have considered the movements of travellers, migrants,
military bodies and medical personnel, and 'transnational lives'. This
book examines an empire-wide discourse of 'madness' as part of this
inquiry.