Du Plessis, Rory2014-06-052014-06-052013Du Plessis, R 2013, 'Promoting and popularising the asylum : photography and asylum image-making at the Grahamstown Lunatic Asylum, 1890-1907', Image & Text , no. 22, pp. 99-132.1020-1497http://hdl.handle.net/2263/40011Studying the history of the Grahamstown Lunatic Asylum under the medical superintendency of Dr Thomas Duncan Greenlees (1890-1907), the nature of imaging the institution emerged as a point of interest. This article specifically explores how Greenlees promoted and popularised the asylum in order to gain custom from private patients. I argue that one way in which Greenlees created patronage was through the cultivation of a public image of the asylum as ideally suited to the care of middle class patients, as well as promising restoration and recuperation from insanity. In this manner, the image-making of the asylum provided a vital tool to counter public fears and stigma. Furthermore, Greenlees's image-making acted as a form of public relations with the broader community to initiate public confidence in the establishment.enDepartment of Visual Arts, University of PretoriaGrahamstown Lunatic AsylumThomas Duncan GreenleesPhotographyLunatic asylumsMichel FoucaultAsylums -- Grahamstown -- South AfricaPromoting and popularising the asylum : photography and asylum image-making at the Grahamstown Lunatic Asylum, 1890-1907Article