(Part-I)
This is highly readable and well-edited historical anthology, a wide-ranging collection that deals with mental retardation over two centuries. The focus is on the views and actions of society. The book deserves perusal by anyone interested in mental retardation.
The editor consider the history of retardation in the context of general history of the recognition of “Mongolism” by John Landon Down, the racial detour that accompanied that recognition, and eventual delineation of trisomy 21 as the cause; the other is a treatise on the pathology of mental retardation by Dr. William Fish, of the Albany Medical College, which he wrote in 1879. The treatise is welcome fare for a physician reader. Discussed are consanguine marriages, abnormalities of the “minute structure of the brain,” microcephaly, epilepsy, and cretinism in Switzerland (…the precise element or elements producing it have not as yet been determined”), hydrocephaly, trauma and paralysis. Equally clear is Dr. Fish’s prescription, “The necessity for training schools and asylums for the reception of the idiotic and imbecile is now unquestioned….[Its is] the duty of society to provide for these feeble ones… An idiot child in the family of a laboring man is a burden weighing heavily upon him and may indirectly by the means of rendering the whole family dependent on the state for support.”
This rather straightforward approach contrasts with the complexity of the history of mental retardation in American society, which is reflective of the larger course of events in American society. The full sweep of that history is outlined from retarded persons functioning as integral parts of their families in the Colonial and early rural United Stats to the almshouses of the late 18th and early 19th centuries, where the poor, infirm, insane and idiotic were conflated in conditions of indescribable depravity. Later came the specialization of institution for epileptics and the retarded. The pressures of urbanization and industrialization the needs of immigrant families and the application of scientific concepts to the definition of retardation, e.g., the advent of intelligence tests and the familiar categorization of the retarded as idiots, imbeciles and morons) led to the heyday of institutionalization. Between 1870 and 1880, there was a fivefold increase in the number of feeble-minded people.
Social forces and scientific interest led to intense focus on and very convoluted thinking about the retarded. The 19th century view of degeneracy (roughly synonymous with bad heredity) led theorists to conceive of social problems such as insanity, poverty, intemperance and criminality as well as idiocy as interchangeable. This view was expounded in “The Jukes” A Study Crime, pauperism Disease and heredity by Richard Dugdale, 1875, a study of a rural clan that over seven generations produced 1200 bastards, beggars, murderers, prostitutes, thieves and syphilitics.
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