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    The persistence of history: racism, anti-Blackness, and the causes of mental ill health, c.1800–2020

    Wynter, R. and Campbell, N. and Chaney, S. and Marks, Sarah (2025) The persistence of history: racism, anti-Blackness, and the causes of mental ill health, c.1800–2020. History of the Human Sciences , ISSN 0952-6951.

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    Abstract

    This article offers an overview, historicising how both ‘race’ and racism have been seen as an aetiological root for mental ill health in people racialised as black, and contextualising the rise of transcultural psychiatry. Heeding the calls of the few historians to study race, mental health, and transcultural psychiatry in the metropole and across the globe, this article includes a wider variety of voices in order to create a dialogue between these histories. Drawing extensively on the global historiography and embracing contemporary work that demonstrates the persistence of racism in psychiatry and research, we use medical publications and a prosopographical lens to explore the push from radical psychiatrists to uproot racism and anti-b/Blackness in psychiatry and to recognise the impact of racism on mental health. This article considers the practice and activism of three late 20th-century UK-trained clinicians: Jamaican Frederick Hickling (1944–2020), British Jamaican Aggrey Burke (b. 1943) and British Sri Lankan Suman Fernando (b. 1932). By shifting the gaze of the historiography, we argue that beyond the towering figures of Frantz Fanon and Thomas Adeoye Lambo, psychiatrists were engaged in anti-racism and decolonisation using history—and doing so long before decolonisation became a watchword for historians globally.

    Metadata

    Item Type: Article
    School: Birkbeck Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences > School of Historical Studies
    Research Centres and Institutes: Interdisciplinary Research on Mental Health, Birkbeck Centre for
    Depositing User: Sarah Marks
    Date Deposited: 27 Jun 2025 15:58
    Last Modified: 15 Aug 2025 21:47
    URI: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/55836

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