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IMAGES OF HEALTH |
Elizabeth Fee is with the History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md. Theodore M. Brown is with the Department of History and Department of Community and Preventive Medicine, University of Rochester, NY.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Elizabeth Fee, Bldg 38, Rm 1E-21, 8600 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20894 (e-mail: elizabeth_fee{at}nlm.nih.gov).
THIS CONTEMPORARY photogravure of Tony Robert-Fleurys 1876 painting famously depicts Pinel Freeing the Insane. Completed more than three quarters of a century after the event, it portrays several stock figures in the tradition of asylum art: a woman (on the ground) tearing at her clothing, 2 huddled melancholics, a tense maniac, and a woman (at right) with a vacant stare chained to the wall.1 In the center is a limp and passive woman, whose stance emphasizes her unthreatening nature. She is being freed from her chains as the commanding figure of Dr Philippe Pinel looks on.
This scene in Robert Fleurys painting is often said to have taken place during the French Revolution as a psychiatric parallel to larger political events: the rights of man extended to the (female) inmates of a mental asylum. In fact, however, Pinel unchained the female patients at Pariss Salpêtrière hospital in 1800.2 He did not entirely abandon physical restraints, but when necessary, he confined the more agitated and potentially dangerous patients to the gentler control of the recently popularized strait-jacket. This was part of a widespread asylum reform movement that began during the late 18th century and continued well into the 19th.3 Lay asylum superintendents and early medical "alienists" (psychiatrists) in Italy, England, France, and the United States contributed to humanizing the treatment of the insane by making confinement less brutal and treatment more gentle and interactive. Pinel in particular spent a great deal of time with his patients, listening attentively as he recovered their life histories. His was a newly sympathetic attitude toward the insane: he tried to make contact with their remaining vestiges of reason, rationally reconstruct their mental world, andafter a momentary act of identificationlead them back to sanity.4
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Thus, while the scene in Robert-Fleurys painting did not literally represent a moment during the French Revolution, it did capture the spirit and the deeper political sentiments of that revolutionary age. The new "moral therapy" developed by Pinel and his contemporaries in the reformed asylums was fundamentally based on the idea of freeing mental patients trapped humanity. This liberation allowed for a therapeutic doctorpatient alliance that was sensitive to the life situations and social circumstances of the "madmen" and "madwomen," who were formerly treated as subhuman. This was appreciated by the young Sigmund Freud, who looked at Robert-Fleurys painting when he attended J. M. Charcots lectures at the Salpêtrière during the winter of 18851886. As Freud said, "In the hall in which he gave his lectures there hung a picture which showed citizen Pinel having the chains taken off the poor madmen at the Salpêtrière. The Salpêtrière, which had witnessed so many horrors during the Revolution, had also been the scene of this most humane of all revolutions."5(p1718)
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Accepted for publication June 5, 2006.
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2. Weiner DB. The Citizen-Patient in Revolutionary and Imperial Paris. Baltimore, Md: Johns Hopkins University Press; 1993:257.
3. Porter R. The Greatest Benefit to Mankind: A Medical History of Humanity. New York, NY: WW Norton; 1997:493500.
4. Goldstein J. Console and Classify: The French Psychiatric Profession in the Nineteenth Century. Chicago, Ill: University of Chicago Press; 2001:109.
5. Freud S. Charcot. In: Strachey J, ed. The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud London, England: Hogarth Press; 19531974, vol 3:1718.
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