Treating Delinquent and Feebleminded Juveniles at the Beloit Industrial School for Girls in Early Twentieth-Century Kansas.
Kansas
child welfare
eugenic
institutionalization
intelligence
isolation
juvenile delinquency
sterilization
Journal
Journal of the history of medicine and allied sciences
ISSN: 1468-4373
Titre abrégé: J Hist Med Allied Sci
Pays: England
ID NLM: 0413415
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
18 Aug 2023
18 Aug 2023
Historique:
medline:
18
8
2023
pubmed:
18
8
2023
entrez:
18
8
2023
Statut:
aheadofprint
Résumé
This study explores the troubling and unintended consequences of public health efforts to address the problem of juvenile delinquency and feeblemindedness. Health care professionals, superintendents, and other authority figures equated undesirable juvenile behaviors such as keeping "bad company" or "falling in with the wrong crowd," truancy, and petty theft with poor breeding, low intelligence, and inheritable criminal tendencies. This article interrogates historical documentation culled from the Kansas State Historical Society (KSHS) and focuses on a few specific cases to reveal the ways a patriarchal political and medical state system both protected and alienated young woman accused of a myriad of behavior issues including delinquency, incorrigibility, and feeblemindedness. I highlight the lives of juvenile women sentenced to the Beloit Industrial School for Girls not simply to better understand an isolated period in United States history but also reproduction. The broader implications of the narratives of girls housed at the Beloit Industrial School for Girls throughout the first half of the twentieth century in Kansas reveal troubling and unintended consequences of public health efforts to fix the problems of delinquency, contagion, and the generational inheritance of undesirable characteristics.
Identifiants
pubmed: 37595254
pii: 7246026
doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad046
pii:
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Informations de copyright
© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.