ABSTRACT

In the late 1970s, South African mental institutions were plagued with scandals about human rights abuse, and psychiatric practitioners were accused of being agents of the apartheid state. Between 1939 and 1994, some psychiatric practitioners supported the mandate of the racist and heteropatriarchal government and most mental patients were treated abysmally. However, unlike studies worldwide that show that women, homosexuals and minorities were institutionalized in far higher numbers than heterosexual men, Psychiatry, Mental Institutions and the Mad in Apartheid South Africa reveals how in South Africa, per capita, white heterosexual males made up the majority of patients in state institutions. The book therefore challenges the monolithic and omnipotent view of the apartheid government and its mental health policy.

While not contesting the belief that human rights abuses occurred within South Africa’s mental health system, Tiffany Fawn Jones argues that the disparity among practitioners and the fluidity of their beliefs, along with the disjointed mental health infrastructure, diffused state control. More importantly, the book shows how patients were also, to a limited extent, able to challenge the constraints of their institutionalization. This volume places the discussions of South Africa’s mental institutions in an international context, highlighting the role that international organizations, such as the Church of Scientology, and political events such as the gay rights movement and the Cold War also played in shaping mental health policy in South Africa.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

chapter |21 pages

Prospects of a Progressive Mental Health System in South Africa Before Apartheid

Tara Hospital and Psychobiology, c1939–1948

chapter |18 pages

The “Disordered” State

Government Policies and Institutions for the Administration of the Mad During Apartheid, 1948–1973

chapter |28 pages

Patient Accounts

Life in State Institutions and Challenging Exile, 1939–1961

chapter |30 pages

Heinous Crimes

Community and Cross-Cultural Psychiatry, and State Mental Health Services for Non-Whites, 1948–1990

chapter |19 pages

Controlling and Challenging Sexuality

Psychiatric Struggles over Homosexuality in the 1960s–1980s

chapter |21 pages

“Monopoly on Madness?”

Private Long-Term Mental Institutions in South Africa, 1963–1989

chapter |21 pages

Critics of the System?

The Church of Scientology and the International Vilification of Psychiatry in South Africa

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion