This paper examines several aspects of the complex relationship between the city
and the Victorian lunatic asylum. The first part of the paper demonstrates that the
urban-ness of the public mental hospital has been a point of some degree of
ambiguity. Mental hospitals were Janus-like—looking forward to the emerging urban
world and yet, at the same time, looking back to a romanticized, rustic past. The
second part of the paper adopts a quantitative approach and reveals that, far from
the receptacle of strictly urban dwellers, the mental hospitals received a
remarkable number of mentally ill from rural regions of the province. This finding,
derived from one of the largest database studies of mental hospital patients ever
undertaken, revises an important and longstanding argument in the historiography of
the North American mental hospital.
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