The Madwoman in the Cellar: Trauma and Gender After Both World Wars — A Field Study of Psychiatric Files

By utilizing practical examples from the Abteilung für Psychatrie [psychiatric ward] at the Landeskrankenanstalt [province hospital] in Carinthia, Austria, in the wake of the two World Wars, this article seeks to explore the stories of hospitalized women and girls after armistice...

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Main Author: Dagmar Wernitznig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture 2021-07-01
Series:On_Culture
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.on-culture.org/journal/issue-11/the-madwoman-in-the-cellar/
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spelling doaj-8301ab2b906b4b2db21ed8f9b90586452021-08-03T08:59:02ZengInternational Graduate Centre for the Study of CultureOn_Culture2366-41422021-07-0111https://doi.org/10.22029/oc.2021.1223The Madwoman in the Cellar: Trauma and Gender After Both World Wars — A Field Study of Psychiatric FilesDagmar WernitznigBy utilizing practical examples from the Abteilung für Psychatrie [psychiatric ward] at the Landeskrankenanstalt [province hospital] in Carinthia, Austria, in the wake of the two World Wars, this article seeks to explore the stories of hospitalized women and girls after armistices and peace treaties. Whereas the dialectics of conflict and resulting post-conflict traumas became increasingly accepted by medics for combat- ants during that time frame, this was not necessarily the case for comparable traumatic experiences of female civilians. Instead, for these patients, the Freudian definition of hysteria prevailed as a stereotypical ‘feminine’ symptom. Accordingly, post-war tran- sitions from 1918 and 1945 onwards, with critical, sometimes even unstable, material and political infrastructures, consolidated a decidedly gender-related notion of trauma. This monopoly of trauma diagnoses, reserved for male patients, hence even resulted in misogyny towards institutionalized women, especially when they were refugees or displaced persons. As this study attempts to show, the mapping of mental illness or normality was heavily determined by sex, class, or ethnic background and in most instances served as an administrative tool for socio-political ends. The research for this contribution is based on archival work conducted for an ERC Advanced Grant, entitled “EIRENE — Post-War Transitions in Gendered Perspective: The Case of the North-Eastern Adriatic Region.”https://www.on-culture.org/journal/issue-11/the-madwoman-in-the-cellar/austriaciviliansgender(post-)war traumapsychiatry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dagmar Wernitznig
spellingShingle Dagmar Wernitznig
The Madwoman in the Cellar: Trauma and Gender After Both World Wars — A Field Study of Psychiatric Files
On_Culture
austria
civilians
gender
(post-)war trauma
psychiatry
author_facet Dagmar Wernitznig
author_sort Dagmar Wernitznig
title The Madwoman in the Cellar: Trauma and Gender After Both World Wars — A Field Study of Psychiatric Files
title_short The Madwoman in the Cellar: Trauma and Gender After Both World Wars — A Field Study of Psychiatric Files
title_full The Madwoman in the Cellar: Trauma and Gender After Both World Wars — A Field Study of Psychiatric Files
title_fullStr The Madwoman in the Cellar: Trauma and Gender After Both World Wars — A Field Study of Psychiatric Files
title_full_unstemmed The Madwoman in the Cellar: Trauma and Gender After Both World Wars — A Field Study of Psychiatric Files
title_sort madwoman in the cellar: trauma and gender after both world wars — a field study of psychiatric files
publisher International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture
series On_Culture
issn 2366-4142
publishDate 2021-07-01
description By utilizing practical examples from the Abteilung für Psychatrie [psychiatric ward] at the Landeskrankenanstalt [province hospital] in Carinthia, Austria, in the wake of the two World Wars, this article seeks to explore the stories of hospitalized women and girls after armistices and peace treaties. Whereas the dialectics of conflict and resulting post-conflict traumas became increasingly accepted by medics for combat- ants during that time frame, this was not necessarily the case for comparable traumatic experiences of female civilians. Instead, for these patients, the Freudian definition of hysteria prevailed as a stereotypical ‘feminine’ symptom. Accordingly, post-war tran- sitions from 1918 and 1945 onwards, with critical, sometimes even unstable, material and political infrastructures, consolidated a decidedly gender-related notion of trauma. This monopoly of trauma diagnoses, reserved for male patients, hence even resulted in misogyny towards institutionalized women, especially when they were refugees or displaced persons. As this study attempts to show, the mapping of mental illness or normality was heavily determined by sex, class, or ethnic background and in most instances served as an administrative tool for socio-political ends. The research for this contribution is based on archival work conducted for an ERC Advanced Grant, entitled “EIRENE — Post-War Transitions in Gendered Perspective: The Case of the North-Eastern Adriatic Region.”
topic austria
civilians
gender
(post-)war trauma
psychiatry
url https://www.on-culture.org/journal/issue-11/the-madwoman-in-the-cellar/
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