Memoirs of Madness

IF 0.1 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
Liana Glew
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Abstract

Abstract:In the mid-nineteenth century, reformers worked to transform the public's image of psychiatric institutions from the rattling chains of Bedlam to sunny gardens and sprawling hospitals. Many patients and ex-patients in the United States claimed that, to uphold this new image, administrators upkept one sparkling ward for visitors to see and kept poor, intellectually disabled, or behaviorally nonnormative patients hidden and neglected in abysmal back wards. Patient-writers challenged the image of the Potemkin asylum in memoirs that doubled as exposés with a twofold purpose: (1) to show readers the hidden parts of asylum life (including the interiority of people experiencing madness) and (2) to advocate for reform or abolition. This essay looks to one lesser-known patient-memoirist, Isaac Hunt, to ask, How do these writers acknowledge readers' desires for a sensational spectacle without replicating the objectifying dynamics of the Bedlam tour? What roles do disability, madness, stigma, and suspicion play in this encounter? Finally, how does one narrate an experience of madness? While memoirs like Hunt's have historically been framed as "psychotic" or "impaired," this essay argues that patient-memoirists often used literary experimentation to capture the ways that they experienced fluctuations in their sense of time, place, and self while in the asylum.
摘要:在19世纪中期,改革者们努力将精神病院的公众形象从疯人院的嘎嘎作响的链条转变为阳光明媚的花园和庞大的医院。美国的许多病人和前病人声称,为了维护这种新形象,管理人员保留了一个光鲜亮丽的病房供访客参观,而把贫穷、智障或行为不规范的病人藏在阴暗的后病房,忽视他们。病人作家们在回忆录中挑战了波坦金疯人院的形象,这些回忆录兼作“暴露”,有双重目的:(1)向读者展示疯人院生活中隐藏的部分(包括经历疯狂的人的内心);(2)倡导改革或废除疯人院。这篇文章向一位不太知名的病人回忆录作者艾萨克·亨特(Isaac Hunt)提出了一个问题:这些作家如何在不复制疯人院之旅的客观化动力的情况下,承认读者对耸人听闻的奇观的渴望?残疾、疯狂、耻辱和怀疑在这次相遇中扮演了什么角色?最后,一个人如何叙述一次疯狂的经历?虽然像亨特这样的回忆录在历史上被认为是“精神病”或“受损”,但本文认为,病人回忆录作者经常使用文学实验来捕捉他们在精神病院经历的时间、地点和自我意识波动的方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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15
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