Journal of the Canadian Historical Association. Vol. 35 No. 1,  2025 - Benjamin Bryce, Heather Stanley, Anna Gaudet, Derrick M. Nault, Will Langford, Leila Inksetter, Jérôme Morneau, Louis-Pascal Rousseau & Karim Chahine

Journal of the Canadian Historical Association. Vol. 35 No. 1, 2025

By Benjamin Bryce, Heather Stanley, Anna Gaudet, Derrick M. Nault, Will Langford, Leila Inksetter, Jérôme Morneau, Louis-Pascal Rousseau & Karim Chahine

  • Release Date: 2025-09-18
  • Genre: History of the Americas

Description

The decision to commit a loved one for carceral treatment and care in a mental asylum was never an uncomplicated one. However, late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century families who had a loved one suffering from a mental illness caused by maternity faced additional logistical and social issues because of the societal and geographical realities of living in British Columbia. Using records from the British Columbia Provincial Insane Asylum, this article explores how settler-colonial families navigated these struggles as well as how insane mothers complicated idealized motherhood and the settler-colonial project in British Columbia as a whole.