The Women Who Misbehaved
In the 19th century, mental health was weaponized to control women by framing non-conformity as madness. Psychiatrists and families used diagnoses like “hysteria” or “moral insanity" to justify institutionalizing women who defied traditional submissive gender roles, often allowing husbands to commit their wives without evidence. Any behavior deemed unnatural, such as intellectual pursuits, public speaking, or strong emotions were labeled as “hysteria”, a catchall term that pathologized normal female experiences. Women were committed to asylums for reasons including religious excitement, suppressed menstruation or for simply being too independent. This system of medical misogyny was designed to suppress female autonomy, reducing women to dependent, domestic roles by threatening them with the loss of freedom if they defied the era’s social expectations. Elizabeth Packard was a 19th-century mental health reformer and advocate for married women's rights who became a national figure after her husband, a Calvinist minister, had her committed to the Illinois State Hospital for the Insane simply for disagreeing with his religious and marital views. Despite being held against her will for three years, she used her time to document the abuses and neglect within the asylum system and, following her release, successfully lobbied the Illinois legislature to pass landmark laws, which helped to reform these practices. Thank you for joining today’s episode where I’ll tell the story of Elizabeth Packard.
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