6533b874fe1ef96bd12d6164

RESEARCH PRODUCT

From mental hygiene to mental health: ideology, discourses and practices in Franco’s Spain (1939–75)

Enric J. NovellaRicardo Campos

subject

Francoist regimemedia_common.quotation_subject050109 social psychologyContext (language use)03 medical and health sciencesAppropriation0302 clinical medicineInsanityMiddle Eastern Mental Health Issues & SyndromesTerminology as TopicHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociologySet (psychology)media_commonPsychiatryMental Disorders05 social sciencesGender studiesHistory 20th CenturyTwentieth centuryMental health030227 psychiatryAccess OptionsPsychiatry and Mental healthSpainMental healthIdeologyPsychosocialMental hygiene

description

Based on an analysis of the discourses, the ideological appropriation and the practical influence of mental hygiene in Spanish psychiatry during the early years of the Francoist regime, this article examines its decline and subsequent replacement by the new concept of mental health promoted by the World Health Organization and other international bodies from the mid-twentieth century. The old approach, essentially focused on the prophylaxis of insanity within the framework of a set of interventionist policies of social defence, was thus transformed from the beginning of the 1960s into a much more ambitious and comprehensive project which sought to promote the psychosocial balance and performance of individuals in the context of increasingly socialized health-related discourses and networks of care.

10.1177/0957154x17721820http://hdl.handle.net/10261/200104