New Zealand, 1860–1910
Angela McCarthy
The book
Migration, Ethnicity, and Madness: New Zealand, 1860–1910 provides a social, cultural, and political history of migration, ethnicity, and madness in New Zealand between 1860 and 1910. Its key aim is to analyse the ways that patients, families, asylum officials, and immigration authorities engaged with the ethnic backgrounds and migration histories and pathways of asylum patients and why. Exploring such issues enables us to appreciate the difficulties that some migrants experienced in their relocation abroad, hardships that are often elided in studies of migration that focus on successful migrant settlement.
Drawing upon lunatic asylum records (including patient casebooks and committal forms), immigration files, Surgeon Superintendents' reports, Asylum Inspectors' reports, medical journals and legislation, the book highlights the importance of examining antecedent experiences, the migration process itself, and settlement in the new land as factors that contributed to admission to an asylum. The study also raises broader themes beyond the asylum of discrimination, exclusion, segregation, and marginalisation, issues that are as evident in society today as in the past.
The author
ANGELA McCARTHY is Professor of Scottish and Irish History at the University of Otago where she teaches migration history, Scottish history, and Irish history. She is the author/editor of seven books on Irish and Scottish migration, English migration, and migration and mental health. She is currently writing a biography of James Taylor, the 'father of the Ceylon tea enterprise'. Her most recent publication was Far from 'Home': The English in New Zealand (Otago University Press, 2012), co-edited with Lyndon Fraser.
Publication details
Paperback, 156 x 234 mm, 248 pp, ISBN 978 1 927322 00 0, $45
Available in NZ and Australia only
2015