"Where the need is greatest": Social psychiatry and race-blind universalism in harlem's lafargue clinic, 1946-1958
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Abstract
Between 1946 and 1958, Harlem was home to a small psychiatric facility, the Lafargue Clinic. An interracial institution run entirely by volunteers, the clinic helped expand mental health care into underserved African American communities. Relying upon extant case files, this article examines how the Lafargue staff handled clinical situations with African Americans. In its attempt to forge a new antiracist approach, the staff struck a balance between viewing Harlem patients as psychological products of their unique social context (social psychiatry) and applying modern psychiatric principles to African Americans without adjusting for racial or sociological difference (race-blind universalism).
First Page
746
Last Page
774
Publication Date
12-1-2009
Recommended Citation
Doyle, Dennis, ""Where the need is greatest": Social psychiatry and race-blind universalism in harlem's lafargue clinic, 1946-1958" (2009). Liberal Arts Faculty Publications. 21.
https://collections.uhsp.edu/liberal-arts_pubs/21