The Women’s Island: Internment of female patients with intellectual disabilities in Denmark, 1923-1961

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

The Women’s Island : Internment of female patients with intellectual disabilities in Denmark, 1923-1961. / Kragh, Jesper Vaczy; Hamre, Bjørn Frithiof.

Islands of Extreme Exclusion: Studies on Global Practices of Isolation, Punishment, and Education of the Unwanted . ed. / Bjørn Hamre; Lisa Villadsen. Brill, 2023. p. 120-136 (Studies in Inclusive Education).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kragh, JV & Hamre, BF 2023, The Women’s Island: Internment of female patients with intellectual disabilities in Denmark, 1923-1961. in B Hamre & L Villadsen (eds), Islands of Extreme Exclusion: Studies on Global Practices of Isolation, Punishment, and Education of the Unwanted . Brill, Studies in Inclusive Education, pp. 120-136. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004688520_007

APA

Kragh, J. V., & Hamre, B. F. (2023). The Women’s Island: Internment of female patients with intellectual disabilities in Denmark, 1923-1961. In B. Hamre, & L. Villadsen (Eds.), Islands of Extreme Exclusion: Studies on Global Practices of Isolation, Punishment, and Education of the Unwanted (pp. 120-136). Brill. Studies in Inclusive Education https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004688520_007

Vancouver

Kragh JV, Hamre BF. The Women’s Island: Internment of female patients with intellectual disabilities in Denmark, 1923-1961. In Hamre B, Villadsen L, editors, Islands of Extreme Exclusion: Studies on Global Practices of Isolation, Punishment, and Education of the Unwanted . Brill. 2023. p. 120-136. (Studies in Inclusive Education). https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004688520_007

Author

Kragh, Jesper Vaczy ; Hamre, Bjørn Frithiof. / The Women’s Island : Internment of female patients with intellectual disabilities in Denmark, 1923-1961. Islands of Extreme Exclusion: Studies on Global Practices of Isolation, Punishment, and Education of the Unwanted . editor / Bjørn Hamre ; Lisa Villadsen. Brill, 2023. pp. 120-136 (Studies in Inclusive Education).

Bibtex

@inbook{75557c108c804f0a97dbf60ba9703db5,
title = "The Women{\textquoteright}s Island: Internment of female patients with intellectual disabilities in Denmark, 1923-1961",
abstract = "Denmark was a pioneer country in establishing island institutions for people with intellectual disabilities. The main figure behind these initiatives was disability doctor Christian Keller, who was instrumental in the Danish eugenic movement. In 1923, he founded the first institution for “morally mental deficient” or “antisocial” women on the island Sprog{\o}. More than five hundred women were interned on Sprog{\o} during its time of operation. Keller{\textquoteright}s initiative attracted wide public attention, and his ideas were highly praised by the press. By the late 1950s, however, views on the proper means and ends had radically changed, the island institution was no longer considered an appropriate solution, and it was terminated in 1961. In popular culture today, Sprog{\o} is often portrayed as equivalent to a prison. However, archival sources of the time and interviews with former inmates from Sprog{\o} provide a more complex picture. By examining patient records, oral history interviews, and other primary sources, we discuss the issue of exclusion and the patients{\textquoteright} perspective and compare these with recent accounts on the history of the island institution. We argue that the women on Sprog{\o} not only were victims of disciplinary exclusion but also had a social life and experienced a certain amount of freedom on the island which was rarely the case on the mainland.",
author = "Kragh, {Jesper Vaczy} and Hamre, {Bj{\o}rn Frithiof}",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1163/9789004688520_007",
language = "English",
isbn = "9789004688513",
series = "Studies in Inclusive Education",
pages = "120--136",
editor = "Bj{\o}rn Hamre and Lisa Villadsen",
booktitle = "Islands of Extreme Exclusion",
publisher = "Brill",
address = "Netherlands",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - The Women’s Island

T2 - Internment of female patients with intellectual disabilities in Denmark, 1923-1961

AU - Kragh, Jesper Vaczy

AU - Hamre, Bjørn Frithiof

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Denmark was a pioneer country in establishing island institutions for people with intellectual disabilities. The main figure behind these initiatives was disability doctor Christian Keller, who was instrumental in the Danish eugenic movement. In 1923, he founded the first institution for “morally mental deficient” or “antisocial” women on the island Sprogø. More than five hundred women were interned on Sprogø during its time of operation. Keller’s initiative attracted wide public attention, and his ideas were highly praised by the press. By the late 1950s, however, views on the proper means and ends had radically changed, the island institution was no longer considered an appropriate solution, and it was terminated in 1961. In popular culture today, Sprogø is often portrayed as equivalent to a prison. However, archival sources of the time and interviews with former inmates from Sprogø provide a more complex picture. By examining patient records, oral history interviews, and other primary sources, we discuss the issue of exclusion and the patients’ perspective and compare these with recent accounts on the history of the island institution. We argue that the women on Sprogø not only were victims of disciplinary exclusion but also had a social life and experienced a certain amount of freedom on the island which was rarely the case on the mainland.

AB - Denmark was a pioneer country in establishing island institutions for people with intellectual disabilities. The main figure behind these initiatives was disability doctor Christian Keller, who was instrumental in the Danish eugenic movement. In 1923, he founded the first institution for “morally mental deficient” or “antisocial” women on the island Sprogø. More than five hundred women were interned on Sprogø during its time of operation. Keller’s initiative attracted wide public attention, and his ideas were highly praised by the press. By the late 1950s, however, views on the proper means and ends had radically changed, the island institution was no longer considered an appropriate solution, and it was terminated in 1961. In popular culture today, Sprogø is often portrayed as equivalent to a prison. However, archival sources of the time and interviews with former inmates from Sprogø provide a more complex picture. By examining patient records, oral history interviews, and other primary sources, we discuss the issue of exclusion and the patients’ perspective and compare these with recent accounts on the history of the island institution. We argue that the women on Sprogø not only were victims of disciplinary exclusion but also had a social life and experienced a certain amount of freedom on the island which was rarely the case on the mainland.

UR - https://brill.com/display/book/9789004688520/BP000016.xml

U2 - 10.1163/9789004688520_007

DO - 10.1163/9789004688520_007

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 9789004688513

SN - 9789004688506

T3 - Studies in Inclusive Education

SP - 120

EP - 136

BT - Islands of Extreme Exclusion

A2 - Hamre, Bjørn

A2 - Villadsen, Lisa

PB - Brill

ER -

ID: 345364673