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Theaters of Madness: Insane Asylums and Nineteenth-Century American Culture

Autor Benjamin Reiss
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 oct 2008
In the mid-1800s, a utopian movement to rehabilitate the insane resulted in a wave of publicly funded asylums—many of which became unexpected centers of cultural activity. Housed in magnificent structures with lush grounds, patients participated in theatrical programs, debating societies, literary journals, schools, and religious services. Theaters of Madness explores both the culture these rich offerings fomented and the asylum’s place in the fabric of nineteenth-century life, reanimating a time when the treatment of the insane was a central topic in debates over democracy, freedom, and modernity.
 
Benjamin Reiss explores the creative lives of patients and the cultural demands of their doctors. Their frequently clashing views turned practically all of American culture—from blackface minstrel shows to the works of William Shakespeare—into a battlefield in the war on insanity. Reiss also shows how asylums touched the lives and shaped the writing of key figures, such as Emerson and Poe, who viewed the system alternately as the fulfillment of a democratic ideal and as a kind of medical enslavement. Without neglecting this troubling contradiction, Theaters of Madness prompts us to reflect on what our society can learn from a generation that urgently and creatively tried to solve the problem of mental illness.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226709642
ISBN-10: 0226709647
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: 14 halftones
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press

Notă biografică

Benjamin Reiss is associate professor of English at Emory University and the author of The Showman and the Slave: Race, Death, and Memory in Barnum’s America.

Cuprins

Acknowledgments
 
Introduction
Sanative Culture
 
Chapter One
Brothers and Sisters of Asylumia:
Literary Life in the New York State Lunatic Asylum
 
Chapter Two
Saneface Minstrelsy:
Blacking Up in the Asylum
 
Chapter Three
Bardolatry in Bedlam:
Shakespeare and Early Psychiatry
 
Chapter Four
Emerson’s Close Encounters with Madness
 
Chapter Five
What’s the Point of a Revolution?
Edgar Allan Poe and the Origins of the Asylum
 
Chapter Six
Out of the Attic:
Gender, Captivity, and Asylum Exposés
 
Epilogue
Echoes
 
Notes
 
Index

Recenzii

“Benjamin Reiss has in important and novel ways successfully linked the history of the mental hospital to crucial developments in American culture. No one before has made so many fascinating connections between the idea and practice of the asylum and the intellectual production of the antebellum era. Both students of asylums and students of culture will find Theaters of Madness provocative and illuminating.”—David J. Rothman, Columbia University

Theaters of Madness captures the ‘texture of a time’ and persuasively chronicles the centrality of insanity to the era’s key public debates about democracy, freedom and enslavement, and modernization. In Benjamin Reiss’s hands, the asylum becomes both an arena for debating cultural assumptions and beliefs and an institution that itself changes the social order. This is a deeply engaging study of a fascinating topic.”—Priscilla Wald, Duke University

"Engaging and thoughtful, Theaters of Madness captures the 'texture of a time unlike our own' when 'the treatment of mental illness was central to national debates about democracy, freedom, and modernity.'"

"Reiss depicts cultural life in the 19th-century asylum and asylum life in 19-century literature in his stunningly well-composed Theaters of Madness."

"Theaters of Madness is a fascinating read for its range of material, depth of analysis, and its theoretical clarity. . . . Reiss shows that to understand madness we need much more than the conceptual tools of psychiatry and, for that matter, of its more reactionary opponents."