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471g4:questions:471g4--week_10_day_1 [2021/10/26 02:03] 73.31.211.206471g4:questions:471g4--week_10_day_1 [2021/10/26 12:24] (current) 76.78.225.150
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 Submitted by Audrey Schroeder. I pledge...  Submitted by Audrey Schroeder. I pledge... 
  
 +Question 1. How many people tried pleading insanity in courts during the 1940s? also how many were successful in their efforts?
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 +Question 2. On page 80, Metzl discusses how prison officials at a Michigan prison reclassified inmates as psychotic and transferred them to mental hospitals like Iona after a riot. Were these reclassifications actual cases of Mental health issues? Or was it a way to simply reduce the population of the prison? 
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 +submitted by Griffin Nameroff
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 +1. Metzl points out that in the first half of the 20th century in America, schizophrenia was seen as a disease of housewives and “of white male genius” (34). In the film A Beautiful Mind (2001), which is about the brilliant mathematician John Nash who suffered from schizophrenia, there is somewhat of a romanticization of his illness due to the creativity it affords him. How much do you think schizophrenia is seen in a similar positive light today?
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 +2. Taking into account the social conceptions of schizophrenia, Metzl cites a Martin Luther King speech in which King states that everyone has schizophrenia in that everyone deals with an inner struggle that pits the desire of the individual against social conformity (121). King urges his listeners to ignore society and follow “your heart.” Although King’s speech is geared towards the civil rights movement, his words have broader implications for society. Can you think of a time when you were criticized by your peers or others for doing what you thought was right?
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 +Submitted by Chris O'Neill
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 +1. In Jonathan Metzl’s book he uses a range of primary sources such as oral histories. Metzl utilizes the oral histories of two former employees of Ionia Hospital for the Criminal Insane in chapters 5 and 9. Are the accounts given by the employees in reference to Alice Wison and Octavious Greene respectively? If so, how did Jonathan Metzl confirm this? 
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 +2. Again, in regards to Jonathan Metzl's primary sources, How did Metzl know that Alice Wilson’s car and Octavious Greene’s car passed each other on the drive away from and toward Ionia Hospital?  
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 +Submitted by Jayden Jordan 
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 +1. In chapter four, there are several debates discussed around the idea that there was biological evidence that supported the need to keep African Americans in bondage and that it was good for their mental health. Why was this perception a thing? We've learned that there were mentally ill slaves in the past, so why was there an assumption that emancipation caused African Americans to go crazy?
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 +2. The shift in perception of schizophrenia between docile, white women to angry, African Americans is interesting since they both are rebelling against social norms- the patriarchy and racist oppression. Is that the case for other types of mental disorders? To medicalize their symptoms in an effort to control select groups of people?
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 +Submitted by Allison Love (I pledge...)
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 +1. "Hello, I'll take things that Things I Sadly Expect out of U.S. History for 800, Alex." Why do you think the medical community chose schizophrenia as the disease they would willfully misdiagnose black men? Do you think they found it particularly emasculating or disqualifying?
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 +2. Do you think Metzel uses enough sourcing as a historian to convince readers of his claims of purposeful misdiagnosis among the African-American community? Is his choice to focus exclusively on case studies (i.e., Ionia State Hospital and a few patients) "enough?" 
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 +Submitted by Theron Gertz       I pledge...
471g4/questions/471g4--week_10_day_1.1635213818.txt.gz · Last modified: 2021/10/26 02:03 by 73.31.211.206