This is one of the first books to comprehensively explore representations of madness in postwar British and American Fiction. The book looks at representations of madness in a range of texts by postwar writers (such as Ken Kesey, Marge Piercy, Patrick McGrath, Leslie Marmon Silko, William Golding, Patrick Gale, William Burroughs and J.G. Ballard, to name a few), and explores the ways in which these representations help to shape public perceptions and how they portray highly unique experiences of mental disorder. The five authors come from diverse backgrounds – literary studies, social psychology, medical psychiatry and psychiatric nursing – and as such the book's perspectives are informed through several discourses, making it a unique co...
textRituals of Diagnosis argues that nineteenth-century America’s literary representations of madnes...
International audience'To link madness and writing is to perpetuate one of the greatest commonplaces...
This dissertation considers how American fiction from the years of 1947-1967 that engages with psych...
This book examines one work dealing with madness from each of five prominent authors. Including disc...
This thesis explores the complex ways in which mental illness was portrayed in Victorian fiction. It...
abstract: This thesis explores how the characterization of mentally ill characters evolves in litera...
Madness has long been a popular theme for literature, featuring as a trope of horror, mystery, trage...
Madness has long been a popular theme for literature, featuring as a trope of horror, mystery, trage...
Madness as a Way of Life examines T.V. Reed\u27s concept of politerature as a means to read fiction ...
Madness has long been a popular theme for literature, featuring as a trope of horror, mystery, trage...
Madness has long been a popular theme for literature, featuring as a trope of horror, mystery, trage...
This dissertation takes up questions of access at the level of language itself, as well as in the co...
This dissertation takes up questions of access at the level of language itself, as well as in the co...
This thesis is an interdisciplinary study of the largely neglected relationship between madness and ...
textRituals of Diagnosis argues that nineteenth-century America’s literary representations of madnes...
textRituals of Diagnosis argues that nineteenth-century America’s literary representations of madnes...
International audience'To link madness and writing is to perpetuate one of the greatest commonplaces...
This dissertation considers how American fiction from the years of 1947-1967 that engages with psych...
This book examines one work dealing with madness from each of five prominent authors. Including disc...
This thesis explores the complex ways in which mental illness was portrayed in Victorian fiction. It...
abstract: This thesis explores how the characterization of mentally ill characters evolves in litera...
Madness has long been a popular theme for literature, featuring as a trope of horror, mystery, trage...
Madness has long been a popular theme for literature, featuring as a trope of horror, mystery, trage...
Madness as a Way of Life examines T.V. Reed\u27s concept of politerature as a means to read fiction ...
Madness has long been a popular theme for literature, featuring as a trope of horror, mystery, trage...
Madness has long been a popular theme for literature, featuring as a trope of horror, mystery, trage...
This dissertation takes up questions of access at the level of language itself, as well as in the co...
This dissertation takes up questions of access at the level of language itself, as well as in the co...
This thesis is an interdisciplinary study of the largely neglected relationship between madness and ...
textRituals of Diagnosis argues that nineteenth-century America’s literary representations of madnes...
textRituals of Diagnosis argues that nineteenth-century America’s literary representations of madnes...
International audience'To link madness and writing is to perpetuate one of the greatest commonplaces...
This dissertation considers how American fiction from the years of 1947-1967 that engages with psych...