Available Formats
The Undesirables: The Law that Locked Away a Generation
By (Author) Sarah Wise
Oneworld Publications
Oneworld Publications
2nd July 2024
4th April 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History of science
History of ideas
Poverty and precarity
Disability: social aspects
Political control and freedoms
History of medicine
Medical ethics and professional conduct
941.083
Hardback
352
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 30mm
By 1950, an estimated 50,000 people had been deemed defective by the government and detained for life under the 1913 Mental Deficiency Act. Their crimes were various: women with children born outside of wedlock; rebellious teenagers caught shoplifting; those with learning disorders, speech impediments and chronic illnesses who had struggled in school; and, of course, those who were simply different. Forcibly removed from their families and confined to a shadow world of specialist facilities in the countryside, they were hidden away and forgotten about out of sight, out of mind. Through painstaking archival research, Sarah Wise pieces together the lives irrevocably changed by this devastating legislation and provides a compelling study of how early 20th-century attitudes to class, gender and disability have continued to shape social policy.
'Superb. The heartrending stories Sarah Wise has unearthed beggar belief beautifully researched and truly compelling.' Catherine Bailey, author ofBlack Diamonds
'A masterpiece of historical research. Sarah Wises exposure of the ways in which we treated so many people a century ago, and still many in recent years, begs the question ofwho is the most morally defective. The Undesirables also raises the spectre of what the large majority of our members of parliament support today.' Danny Dorling, author of Shattered Nation
Sarah Wise is a social historian and visiting professor at the University of California's London Study Centre. Her previous books include Inconvenient People: Lunacy, Liberty and the Mad-Doctors in Victorian England and The Blackest Streets: The Life and Death of a Victorian Slum.