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https://doi.org/10.17645/up.v5i4.3554

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Ontological boundaries or contextual borders: the urban ethics of the asylum

[journal article]

Högström, Ebba
Philo, Chris

Abstract

What and where is "the asylum" today? To what extent do mental healthcare facilities stand out as clearly bounded entities in the modern urban landscape, perhaps reflecting their history as deliberately set-apart and then often stigmatised places? To what extent have they maybe become less obtrusive... view more

What and where is "the asylum" today? To what extent do mental healthcare facilities stand out as clearly bounded entities in the modern urban landscape, perhaps reflecting their history as deliberately set-apart and then often stigmatised places? To what extent have they maybe become less obtrusive, more sunk into and interacting with their urban surroundings? What issues of urban ethics are at stake: concerning who/what is starkly demarcated in the city, perhaps subjected to exclusionary logics and pressures, or more sensitively integrated into the city, planned for inclusion and co-dwelling? These questions underscore our article, rooted in an in-depth case study of Gartnavel Royal Hospital, Glasgow, opened as a ‘lunatic asylum’ on its present, originally greenfield, site in the 1840s and remaining open today surrounded by dense urban expansion. Building from the "voices" of patients, staff and others familiar with the site, we discuss the sense of this asylum as "other" to, as "outside" of, or merely "beside" the urban fabric. Drawing from concepts of "orientations" (Ahmed, 2006), sites as spatial constructions (Burns & Kahn, 2005), the power of borders and boundaries (Haselsberger, 2014; Sennett, 2018), issues of site, stigma and related urban ethical matters will be foregrounded. Where are the boundaries that divide the hospital campus from the urban context? What are the material signifiers, the cultural associations or the emotional attachments that continue to set the boundaries? Or, in practice, do boundaries melt into messier, overlapping, intersecting border zones, textured by diverse, sometimes contradictory, bordering practices? And, if so, what are the implications?... view less

Keywords
hospital; psychiatry; town; ethics; stigma; environment; zone

Classification
Area Development Planning, Regional Research
Basic Research, General Concepts and History of Psychology
Sociology of Settlements and Housing, Urban Sociology

Free Keywords
asylum; border; boundary; built environment

Document language
English

Publication Year
2020

Page/Pages
106–120 p.

Journal
Urban Planning, 5 (2020) 4

Issue topic
Built environment, ethics and everyday life

ISSN
2183-7635

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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Home  |  Legal notices  |  Operational concept  |  Privacy policy
© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.