Abstract

The authors explore the use of space within and outside the buildings of Valkenberg, a Cape Colonial asylum. Valkenberg's design was conditioned by a complex interplay of factors: the way insanity itself was viewed by the colonial government, developments in medical knowledge, social-economic relations in the colonial setting, and practical forms of treatment. The internal structuring of space within the building, and the way the building was situated in the landscape, are graphic representations of 4 influences, in tension with each other: determination to reform the colony's psychiatric practices, a desire to reproduce British institutions in colonial settings, a stigmatizing fear of insanity and lunatics, and a desire to maintain strict segregation between White and Black staff and patients.

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