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6 Listening to Peat Island Planning, Press Coverage, and Deinstitutional Violence at a Potential Site of Conscience

  • Justine Lloyd and Nicole Matthews
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Sites of Conscience
This chapter is in the book Sites of Conscience
© 2024, University of British Columbia Press

© 2024, University of British Columbia Press

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Acknowledgments viii
  4. SITES OF CONSCIENCE 1
  5. Introduction Sites of Conscience, Social Justice, and the Unfinished Project of Deinstitutionalization 1
  6. PART 1 Centring Survivor Voices and Experiences in the “Afterlives” of Disability and Psychiatric Institutions
  7. 1 Historical Memory, Anti-psychiatry, and Mad People’s History 29
  8. 2 Contested Memorialization Filling the “Empty Space” of the T4 Murders 46
  9. 3 Names on Frosted Glass From Fetishizing Perpetrator Mindsets to Disability Memorialization of the Victims 64
  10. 4 Truth, Reconciliation, and Disability Institutionalization in Massachusetts 80
  11. 5 “I’m Not Really Here” Searching for Traces of Institutional Survivors in Their Records 91
  12. 6 Listening to Peat Island Planning, Press Coverage, and Deinstitutional Violence at a Potential Site of Conscience 109
  13. 7 “The Old Concept of Asylum Has a Valid Place” Patient Experiences of Mental Hospitals as Therapeutic 126
  14. PART 2 Learning from Sites of Conscience Practices
  15. 8 Benevolent Asylum Performance Art, Memory, and Decommissioned Psychiatric Institutions 145
  16. 9 Constructing History in the Post-institutional Era Disability Theatre as a Site of Critique 166
  17. 10 The Workhouse and Infirmary Southwell Collaboration with Learning-Disabled Neighbours and Partners 182
  18. 11 Intellectual Disability in South Africa Affirmative Stories and Photographs from the Grahamstown Lunatic Asylum, 1890–1920 196
  19. 12 Pathways to Disrupt Eugenics in Higher Education 213
  20. 13 “You Just Want to Do What’s Right” Staff Collusion in Institutional Abuse of People with Learning Disabilities 231
  21. PART 3 Social Justice and Place Making in the Absence of Sites of Conscience
  22. 14 A Place to Have a Cup of Cofee: Remembering and Returning to a Dismantled Psychiatric Hospita 251
  23. 15 A Sense of Community within a Site of Amplified Stigma The Strange Case of Spookers 266
  24. 16 Naming Streets in a Post-asylum Landscape Cultural Heritage Processes and the Politics of Ableism 283
  25. 17 “We Bent the Motorway” Community Action on Exminster Hospital 298
  26. Contributors 315
  27. Index 322
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