In this Current Issues article I explore how the world of art can show a different view on ‘madness’. Mad Studies, as an emergent academic field, has the possibility to offer alternative and contrasting views on madness. I argue that the current bio-medical model where ‘madness’ is reduced to ‘mental illness’ denies us the possibility to hear different views and see a person behind a diagnosis. The art world, through visual representation, can present us with an ‘unknown’ factor of ‘madness’ where madness remains a mystery that we will never truly grasp. Visual art can also depict the real human beings and real stories behind ‘diagnoses’
While the medical science recognises a number of symptoms which point to a particular mental diseas...
Amidst renewed interest in the psychiatric writings of Frantz Fanon, this article reads his work aga...
Our merging of artistic ability and mental instability is a notion that goes farther back than many ...
This article is a review of On Madness and the Demand for Recognition: A philosophical inquiry into ...
The figure of madness has long been positioned as the literary, poetic or philosophical ‘other’, fun...
Working under the premise that disability as an identity category cannot be ignored when addressing ...
Academia and scholarship of the 20th-century bred a renewed interest in mental illness throughout hi...
In this article I trace a history of the most ubiquitous visual symbol of madness: the staff. First,...
Mad Studies is an emerging new critical project. As such, its purpose and future direction is open t...
This article presents a perspective on psychology that relates directly to Abraham Maslow’s focus up...
Summary In a volatile world, during a time of multiple crises and amid a projected upsurge in mental...
It is reasonable to affirm that madness is inborn with the human spirit and that only in lunacy it i...
Madness is a paradoxical topic between physis and thesis. Madness thrusts us within boundaries appar...
Towards cultural change: re-imagining mental health through ‘lofty’ art We are amidst a global menta...
This paper discusses the greater unfoldment of the mind of the artist as beyond asylum cases that mo...
While the medical science recognises a number of symptoms which point to a particular mental diseas...
Amidst renewed interest in the psychiatric writings of Frantz Fanon, this article reads his work aga...
Our merging of artistic ability and mental instability is a notion that goes farther back than many ...
This article is a review of On Madness and the Demand for Recognition: A philosophical inquiry into ...
The figure of madness has long been positioned as the literary, poetic or philosophical ‘other’, fun...
Working under the premise that disability as an identity category cannot be ignored when addressing ...
Academia and scholarship of the 20th-century bred a renewed interest in mental illness throughout hi...
In this article I trace a history of the most ubiquitous visual symbol of madness: the staff. First,...
Mad Studies is an emerging new critical project. As such, its purpose and future direction is open t...
This article presents a perspective on psychology that relates directly to Abraham Maslow’s focus up...
Summary In a volatile world, during a time of multiple crises and amid a projected upsurge in mental...
It is reasonable to affirm that madness is inborn with the human spirit and that only in lunacy it i...
Madness is a paradoxical topic between physis and thesis. Madness thrusts us within boundaries appar...
Towards cultural change: re-imagining mental health through ‘lofty’ art We are amidst a global menta...
This paper discusses the greater unfoldment of the mind of the artist as beyond asylum cases that mo...
While the medical science recognises a number of symptoms which point to a particular mental diseas...
Amidst renewed interest in the psychiatric writings of Frantz Fanon, this article reads his work aga...
Our merging of artistic ability and mental instability is a notion that goes farther back than many ...