“The Hidden Patients” looks at questions of gender in psychiatric publications on the colonial Maghreb, which described “normal” and “abnormal” forms of behaviour among the colonised and compared these findings to descriptions of Europeans who had been diagnosed with psychiatric “abnormalities”. Many psychiatric experts claimed that Muslim women rarely went “mad” and that they only accounted for a negligible percentage of the patients cared for by colonial psychiatrists. Consequently, relatively little space was dedicated to female Muslim patients in the theoretical source material, even though case studies and statistics clearly showed that it was mainly an imaginary absence and that it contradicted the everyday experiences of the psychiatrists.
Die promovierte Historikerin und Arabistin Nina Salouâ Studer widmet sich Fragen der Genderforschung und der Medizingeschichte im kolonialen Nordafrika, und untersucht momentan die koloniale Medikalisierung von Trinkgewohnheiten anhand der Getränke Absinthe, Tee und Kaffee.