Notes
1. This review article was written in the course of a four-month fellowship at the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine in Oxford, financed through a Wiener-Anspach grant. I am grateful to Lut Van Daele, Kenneth Bertrams and Sloan Mahone for their comments on previous drafts.
2. CitationPorter and Micale, “Introduction”, in Discovering the History of Psychiatry. New York/Oxford, pp. 3–36.
3. Probably the most illustrative example of this critical historiography is CitationScull, Museums of Madness.
4. CitationBlok, Baas in eigen brein.
5. CitationCrossley, Contesting Psychiatry.
6. CitationHanrath, Zwischen ‘Euthanasie’ und Psychiatriereform.
7. CitationJackson, Surfacing Up.
8. CitationMissa, Naissance de la psychiatrie biologique.
9. CitationLaing, The Divided Self.
10. CitationWerner and Zimmermann, De la comparaison à l'histoire croisée.
11. CitationShorter, A History of Psychiatry, pp. 273–83.
12. CitationGiordana, La Meglio Gioventu, 2003 (358 min.).
13. For example: CitationErnst, Mad Tales from the Raj.
14. For example: CitationPols, “The Nature of the Native Mind”.
15. Exception: CitationKeller, Colonial Madness.
16. CitationVaughan, Curing their Ills.
17. CitationFoucault, Les Anormaux or CitationFoucault, Le pouvoir psychiatrique.
18. CitationErving, Asylums, p. 203; CitationLüdtke, Alf. “Eigensinn”, in Alltagskultur, Subjektivität und Geschichte. Zur Theorie und Praxis von Alltagsgeschichte, pp. 139–53.
19. Citation Zeithistorische Forschungen , 3, 2004 (a special number consecrated to “Europäisierung der Zeitgeschichte”) and Citation“Transnationale Geschichte – eine Zwischenbilanz”. http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/forum/.
20. CitationCastel et al., La société psychiatrique avancée.