Contents
1Introduction: Mental Disorder and the Modern Prison in England and Ireland, 1840–1900
2The Making of the Modern Prison System: Reformation, Separation and the Mind, 1840–1860
3The Prison Medical Officer: Deterrence, Dual Loyalty and the Production of Psychiatric Expertise, 1860–1895
4Criminal or Lunatic, Prisoner or Patient?: Confining Insanity in the Late Nineteenth Century
5‘He Puts on Symptoms of Incoherence’: Feigning and Detecting Insanity in Nineteenth-Century Prisons
6Conclusion: The Decline of the Separate System, the Prisoner Patient and Enduring Legacies