School of History and Philosophy of Science
RESEARCH SEMINAR
[The University of Sydney]
[https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20260303/fb/1c/f7/c0/29fc95ab5254e4f61db5bc22_1276x638.jpg]
Jim Crow in the Asylum: Psychiatry and Civil Rights in the American South
Kylie Smith

Dates: Monday, 9/3/2026
Start Time: 5:30pm
Venue: Carslaw Building (F07), Level 4, Room 450
How to register: Free, no registration required
Website: 
https://hps-events.sydney.edu.au/<https://t.e2ma.net/click/guj8fy/8zmgipmb/s3ivg3e>

Abstract:  “Jim Crow in the Asylum: Psychiatry and Civil Rights in the American 
South” documents the impact of racial segregation and the fight for medical 
civil rights in the state psychiatric hospitals in Georgia, Alabama, and 
Mississippi between 1948 and 1972. Drawing on extensive archival and legal 
records, as well as first-hand accounts, Kylie Smith explores the ways that 
local Black communities and families negotiated mental health care in the 
context of white supremacy and fought for their rights as citizens. By placing 
the history of these hospitals in the context of the Civil Rights movement, the 
book adds to both the history of psychiatry and the history of Civil Rights, 
demonstrating the multiple terrains on which activists fought to end 
segregation. In doing so, Smith argues that psychiatry itself was deeply 
entwined with the Southern racial project, and that Black patients were 
particularly vulnerable to populist politics. This combination of political 
expediency and scientific racism created hospitals which operated as little 
more than prisons in the wake of the plantation, and laid the foundation for 
racist approaches to mental health care today.


Bio: Dr. Kylie Smith was until recently Associate Professor in the Nell Hodgson 
Woodruff School of Nursing and Associate Faculty in the Department of History 
at Emory University in Atlanta. While in the US, Kylie taught courses on race 
and health in US history and authored two monographs in the history of 
psychiatry.

Her first book, Talking Therapy: Knowledge and Power in American Psychiatric 
Nursing, published by Rutgers University Press in 2020, won the Lavinia L. Dock 
Award from the American Association for the History of Nursing and the American 
Journal of Nursing’s Book of the Year Award in the area of History and Public 
Policy.

Her new book, Jim Crow in the Asylum: Psychiatry and Civil Rights in the 
American South was published by the University of North Carolina Press in 
January 2026. Initial research for the book was supported by the National 
Library of Medicine (NIH) G13 Grant, and thanks to a grant from the Mellon 
Foundation’s Digital Publishing in the Humanities program, the book has been 
released in print, as a free downloadable E-book, and an Open Access Digitally 
enhanced monograph on the Manifold Scholar platform.

In between monographs, Kylie co-edited, with Courtney Thompson, the collection 
“Do Less Harm: Ethical Questions for Health Historians”. Published by Johns 
Hopkins University Press in 2025, the book contains 28 essays on the challenges 
of developing an ethics of care for historical work at the intersection of 
health, medicine, and justice.

Kylie received her PhD (a study of history of juvenile delinquency in 
Australia) from the University of Wollongong and has returned to Australia to 
continue her work on a history of forensic psychiatry and juvenile detention in 
colonial regimes

[https://images.e2ma.net/0/images/templates/spacer.gif]


[The University of Sydney]
Keep in touch
[Facebook]<https://t.e2ma.net/click/guj8fy/8zmgipmb/8vjvg3e>
[Twitter]<https://t.e2ma.net/click/guj8fy/8zmgipmb/ookvg3e>
[Instagram]<https://t.e2ma.net/click/guj8fy/8zmgipmb/4glvg3e>
[LinkedIn]<https://t.e2ma.net/click/guj8fy/8zmgipmb/k9lvg3e>
[YouTube]<https://t.e2ma.net/click/guj8fy/8zmgipmb/01mvg3e>
Copyright © 2026 The University of Sydney, NSW 2006 Australia
Phone +61 2 9351 2222 ABN 15 211 513 464 CRICOS Number: 00026A

Please add [email protected] to your address book or senders safe list to 
make sure you continue to see our emails in the future.

Manage<https://app.e2ma.net/app2/audience/signup/1976084/1957350/1461184998/105406278118/?s=m3_JcrNHVoWDcfGX9NzKGA0h-kC1VrmH69D7cHUDX64>
 your preferences | Opt 
out<https://t.e2ma.net/optout/guj8fy/8zmgipmb?s=U7Ce3UxKuE3rAQe5HRjxx8vCBvTaBn1xx_tnCpNBDiA>
 using TrueRemove®
Got this as a forward? Sign 
up<https://app.e2ma.net/app2/audience/signup/1976084/1957350.1461184998/> to 
receive our future emails.
View this email online<https://t.e2ma.net/message/guj8fy/8zmgipmb>.

Disclaimer<https://t.e2ma.net/click/guj8fy/8zmgipmb/gunvg3e> | Privacy 
statement<https://t.e2ma.net/click/guj8fy/8zmgipmb/wmovg3e> | University of 
Sydney<https://t.e2ma.net/click/guj8fy/8zmgipmb/cfpvg3e>


---------
SydPhil mailing list

To unsubscribe, change your membership options, find answers to common 
problems, or visit our online archives, please go to the list information page:

https://mailman.sydney.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/sydphil

Reply via email to