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Inconvenient People
Inconvenient People: Lunacy, Liberty, and the Mad-Doctors in England | Sarah Wise
1 post | 1 read | 9 to read
The phenomenon of false allegations of mental illness is as old as our first interactions as human beings. Every one of us has described some other person as crazy or insane, and most all of us have had periods, moments at least, of madness. But it took the confluence of the law and medical science, mad-doctors, alienists, priests and barristers, to raise the matter to a level of “science,” capable of being used by conniving relatives, “designing families” and scheming neighbors to destroy people who found themselves in the way, people whose removal could provide their survivors with money or property or other less frivolous benefits. Girl Interrupted in only a recent example. And reversing this sort of diagnosis and incarceration became increasingly more difficult, as even the most temperate attempt to leave these “homes” or “hospitals” was deemed “crazy.” Kept in a madhouse, one became a little mad, as Jack Nicholson and Ken Kesey explain in One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest. In this sadly terrifying, emotionally moving, and occasionally hilarious book, twelve cases of contested lunacy are offered as examples of the shifting arguments regarding what constituted sanity and insanity. They offer unique insight into the fears of sexuality, inherited madness, greed and fraud, until public feeling shifted and turned against the rising alienists who would challenge liberty and freedom of people who were perhaps simply “difficult,” but were turned into victims of this unscrupulous trade. This fascinating book is filled with stories almost impossible to believe but wildly engaging, a book one will not soon forget.
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I saw Sarah Wise give a talk on Victorian “madness“ diagnoses and incarcerations on Wednesday. It was fascinating and painted a picture quite different from what I (and she) had thought. Must read the book now! (She touched on famous literary examples from Wilkie Collins and Charlotte Bronte)

Kalalalatja Sounds great! 5y
JazzFeathers It does sound very interesting. Incidente, l've recently read two novels, both set in the 1910s, addressing this matter. It's quite upsetting thinking about it. 5y
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