1918 1921 Research Problem Mental hygiene is the prevention of mental disorders and the promotion of mental health for the enrichment of human life Fitzgerald amp Fleming 1932 p 15 ID: 287961
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Slide1
“The Foreign Invasion of Canada”: Representations of Race, Immigration, and Foreignness in Canadian Mental Hygiene Movement Literature from
1918 - 1921Slide2
Research Problem
Mental hygiene is “the prevention of mental disorders and the promotion of mental health for the enrichment of human life” (Fitzgerald & Fleming, 1932, p. 15).Slide3
Research Problem
This study aims to examine discourses of race, foreignness, and immigration that underlie early Canadian mental hygiene movement (CMHM) literature from 1918-1921 and its connection to contemporary practices. Slide4
Research Problem
Rushing to practice is “a refusal to engage with learning about social violence, such as colonialism, racism and slavery” (
Pon
, 2009, p. 69)Slide5
Research Design
Critical Discourse Analysis
discourse
as a
text
discourse
as
discursive practice
discourse
as social practiceSlide6
Research Findings
Purpose of CJMH
Nationalism
, Colonialism and Canadian Identity
Representation of Immigrants
and Racialized People
Fundamentally
Foreign
Prone to Mental Illness and Pathology
Criminality
Burden to Society
Eugenics and Immigration
Eugenics
Immigration and ‘Reverse Eugenics’
Concerns Around Racial Mixing
Immigration PolicySlide7
Purpose of CJMH
“
in order to give impetus to the mental hygiene movement and bring it before the public” (Foreword, 1919).
“The
CJMH hopes to interest the general public, as well as the medical professional, in all the mental problems confronting the community, in their bearing upon the welfare of the individual and of society, and in the work which is being done towards their clearer definition and more adequate solution
.”
(p. 3) Slide8
Nationalism, Colonialism and Canadian Identity
In
The Scope and Aims of the Mental Hygiene Movement
, Hincks (1919) stated,
“the
brains of a nation constitute its most important asset. No country can be truly great, and remain so, with a population possessed of mediocre mentality. Natural resources may be necessary for the success of a country, but alone they are not sufficient, and perforce must take second place to human
resources”
(p. 20
)Slide9
Nationalism, Colonialism and Canadian Identity
This
idea can be seen in Sir James Barr’s statement, quoted by Page (1919), “You have, here, a virgin soil and you should see that is peopled with a vigorous and an intellectual race. You should shut out all degenerate foreigners as you would exclude a mad dog” (p. 59).
Violence of colonialism made invisibleSlide10
Nationalism, Colonialism and Canadian Identity
Smith
(1920) for the purpose of examining immigration statistics, “group[
ed
] the Canadian, British and American (because of “Springing from Common Stock”) [together and] add[
ed
] the Scandinavian and French (who are “quickly Canadianized”)” (p. 76).
Fauman
(1920) explained, “In return for the privileges of citizenship granted the immigrant, his complete and rapid
Canadianization
is desired” (p. 323). Slide11
Immigrants and Racialized People Represented as Fundamentally Foreign
the native of India was not regarded as “a person suited to this country; that accustomed as many of them are to the conditions of a tropical climate,
and possessing manners and customs so unlike those of our own people, their inability to readily adapt themselves to surroundings
entirely different could not be other than entail an amount of privation and suffering which render a discontinuance of such immigration most desirable in the interest of the Indians themselves” (p. 215)
“
And
the first outstanding feature is that
[the Chinese]
do not assimilate rapidly or
easily
.”
(p. 219)Slide12
Immigrants and Racialized People Represented as
Prone to Mental Illness and Pathology
Smith
(1920) stated,
“the
river of our national life has been polluted by the turbid streams from immigrant sources. The causes for this are sometimes
declared to lie in the degenerate character of the immigrants
, sometimes in the defects of immigration laws and regulations, sometimes in the inadequacy of the sifting process on the part of immigration officials, and sometimes in all three
.”
(p.
73)
Slide13
Immigrants and Racialized People Represented as
Prone to Criminality
In the
Mental Hygiene Survey – Province of British Columbia
(1920), the following is stated:
It
was her opinion that the
Chinese contributed to immoral practices
through the sale of drugs and the enticing of white women.
[
…]
Immorality
is apparently practised extensively by lower grades of the Greeks, who do a large restaurant business in the city. It is the belief of the Police staff that the
Greeks seek out girls for employment, with immoral purposes in view
. (p. 39-40)Slide14
Immigrants and Racialized People Represented as
Burdens to Society
Often stated in economic terms, looking at the ‘cost’ of immigration
The
blame is placed squarely on the immigrants themselves,
“On
his arrival in the province he is generally either with nothing or with a very small sum in his pocket; entertaining the most erroneous ideas as to his prospects here; expecting immediate and constant employment, at ample wages; entirely ignorant of the nature of the country; and of the place where labour is most in demand, and of the best means by which to obtain
employment”
(Smith, 1919a, p. 54)Slide15
Eugenics
Hincks (1919) stated a need “to insure the nation, that Canadians will be well born, and well nurtured” (p. 20).
Russel
(1920) similarly expressed, “One great cause of feeblemindedness . . . Is heredity.
[
…]
The
birth rate among the mentally deficient is approximately twice that of the normal population” (p. 95).
Baragar
(1921)
stated
, “Faulty or tainted heredity has been variously regarded as bearing an important causal relationship to mental
disease”
(p. 194)
Meyer (1919) expressed concern about “letting them out-marry the marriageable and out-multiply the fit” (p. 152). Slide16
Eugenics
“Health
officers will do well to ponder the following paragraph taken from this manual . . . “ . . . Physical disability may give rise to dependency, but with the death of the individual the nation is relieved of the burden. In the case of the insane or mentally defective there is imposed a burden which tends to perpetuate itself
.”
(Notes and News, 1919, p. 285
)
In
the decades following the publishing of these journals, these ideas would give rise to policies of forced sterilization in Alberta and British
Columbia (
Withers, 2012, p. 21). Slide17
Eugenics
Taft (1919) also suggested that “
Sterilization
of the feebleminded is logically the solution for the problem of prevention of propagation of the mentally unfit where feeblemindedness is due to heredity” (p. 166)
Taft (1919) stated, “
Segregation
much more than sterilization offers a practical solution to part of our problem at least and may eventually be the final, most practical solution” (p. 166).
Family planning
is another eugenicist policy advocated in the CJMH. Meyer (1919) stated, “Love is very justly nature’s and mankind’s ablest matrimonial agent. Love plays many pranks and is said to be blind; but love, like any other capacity, can be made to grow better or worse” (p. 153). Slide18
Immigration and ‘Reverse Eugenics’
“Immigration
tends to sterilize the people on the higher social and economic levels who are already in the
country
. [
…]
The
low-class immigrants have not only diminished the numbers of the natives, but have also dissipated the energies of the latter by introducing elements of conflict into the nation, and thus, prevented the development of many of those kinds of ability which are most worth
cultivation”.
(Abstract, 1919, p. 245)Slide19
Racial Mixing
With regards to people of Asian descent, Smith (1919c) stated, “And if assimilation is so backward what indication is there that amalgamation, or blending of races, is practicable or even advisable? This question becomes more and more difficult to answer the more closely it is analyzed” (p. 219). Slide20
Immigration Policy
It is
expressed that
“it
was discovered that the feebleminded, insane, and psychopathic of that province
were recruited out of all reasonable proportion from the immigrant class
, and it was also found that these individuals were playing a major role in such conditions as crime, juvenile delinquency, prostitution, illegitimacy, spread of venereal disease, pauperism, certain phases of industrial unrest, and primary school inefficiency
.”
(The First Year of the Canadian National Committee for Mental Hygiene, 1919, p.74)Slide21
Immigration Policy
Baragar
(1921) explained, “
From a national and social standpoint the
prevention of mental disease involves the exclusion of immigrants
whose capacity for mental adjustment is low. . . . The conclusions are obvious. Stringent regulations are required to prevent those physically and mentally unfit from entering or becoming citizens of Canada” (p. 196).