This article examines Flannery O'Connor's depiction of mental disability in The Violent Bear It Away. O'Connor's work presents a particularly rich and complex intellectual space for examining stereotypes connecting mental disability with religious faith. Religious difference and disabled difference are presented as symbolically inseparable in The Violent Bear It Away, a conflation that may encourage negative stereotypes regarding both faith and madness. In the larger scope of the novel, O'Connor uses Tarwater's ambiguous status as both a mad man and a man of faith to question modern psychology and the mental healthcare system: just as readers are implicitly asked to "diagnose" her mad characters (but are set up to fail by the novel's delibe...
j In the last 10 years, media studies have started to address the problem of the stigmatization of m...
In the American twentieth century, the intersection of religious imagery with fictional representati...
There is a commonly held belief that fear of disability by society is the reason for segregation of ...
Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2005Flannery O'Connor's Wise Blood, 'Good Country Peop...
This dissertation takes up questions of access at the level of language itself, as well as in the co...
This feminist disability study of Flannery O’Connor’s short fiction considers the ways in which the ...
This essay analyzes Flannery O’Connor’s use of characters whose bodies depart from cultural rules an...
The depiction of mental illness within in the horror film genre has historically been non-inclusive ...
The fictitious worlds created by Flannery O???Connor's imagination are laden\ud with violence, destr...
This article takes a disability studies approach to Rebecca West’s 1918 novel, The Return of the Sol...
Monstrous Mothers: A Feminist Disability Reading of The Babadook & The Yellow Wallpaper This essay w...
Depictions of the mentally ill, even in the modern media, have often been reduced to a trope of demo...
This article makes the case for “social justice” in relation to the conceptions of “madness” that cu...
This Article examines how people with mental disabilities and mental illnesses have been treated und...
Throughout O\u27Connor\u27s fiction, we see characters who are marked by suffering or disability. It...
j In the last 10 years, media studies have started to address the problem of the stigmatization of m...
In the American twentieth century, the intersection of religious imagery with fictional representati...
There is a commonly held belief that fear of disability by society is the reason for segregation of ...
Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2005Flannery O'Connor's Wise Blood, 'Good Country Peop...
This dissertation takes up questions of access at the level of language itself, as well as in the co...
This feminist disability study of Flannery O’Connor’s short fiction considers the ways in which the ...
This essay analyzes Flannery O’Connor’s use of characters whose bodies depart from cultural rules an...
The depiction of mental illness within in the horror film genre has historically been non-inclusive ...
The fictitious worlds created by Flannery O???Connor's imagination are laden\ud with violence, destr...
This article takes a disability studies approach to Rebecca West’s 1918 novel, The Return of the Sol...
Monstrous Mothers: A Feminist Disability Reading of The Babadook & The Yellow Wallpaper This essay w...
Depictions of the mentally ill, even in the modern media, have often been reduced to a trope of demo...
This article makes the case for “social justice” in relation to the conceptions of “madness” that cu...
This Article examines how people with mental disabilities and mental illnesses have been treated und...
Throughout O\u27Connor\u27s fiction, we see characters who are marked by suffering or disability. It...
j In the last 10 years, media studies have started to address the problem of the stigmatization of m...
In the American twentieth century, the intersection of religious imagery with fictional representati...
There is a commonly held belief that fear of disability by society is the reason for segregation of ...