Friday 12 December 2014

Women and madness- the relationship women’s bodies occupy with regard to evolving social systems




This is an excerpt from a lecture I delivered at University of Salford today.

Images of mad women in popular art and literature have become tropes. Both these categories i.e. women and madness inhabit inferior positions in our society. When conflated they produce a voiceless subject whose exploitation is often ignored. 
Gin Lane are  print issued in 1751 by English artist William Hogarth 

Women’s bodies are politicised spaces on which patriarchal structures exert pressures to conform and normalise. Madness silences those voices and relabels them as dangerous to society. It is widely documented that women’s bodies are in constant fear of being harmed physically. In the case of the mad woman the process is institutionalised.  What constitutes madness is still a contentious issue. 
Looking at the past one can point out the obvious errors of mislabelling conditions affecting women as misunderstandings of a society that is not as advanced as ours. Take for example hysteria a condition whereby a woman’s uterus was thought to wander in her body which drove her to madness. Medicalisation of female biology has predetermined female inferiority. Immersed in our present culture psychiatric explanations seem unquestionable and even natural. I would like to argue it is harder to see discrimination in our own time, which is not very different from a previous era. Through examples of current mental disorders that pathologise women I will attempt to show how the spectre of the ‘mad woman’ still haunts our society through biologised understandings of madness.
Psychiatry has been described as system based on social control, although in a more insidious manner. Kvale (1992) asserts Psychology- all of it - is a branch of the police; psychodynamic and humanistic psychologies are the secret police". The power psychology exerts on the way we conceptualise the world around us is often unchecked. Often reifying existing prejudices in society. Women are a target population of this system. It is a well-known fact that women are not equal in most societies around the world, these inequalities are often justified by pathologising women or singling them out.

Long before David Rosenhan conducted his experiment investigative journalist Elizabeth Jane Cochrane’s conducted a similar experiment. In 1887 she published the book Ten Days in a Mad-House. It was based on her experience in an asylum for ten days. She deliberately presented  herself as a stereotypical mad woman. Conditions in the asylum were far from satisfactory. 


Here is a link the Rosenhan Experiment 


                                       

Part 1 of Ten Days in a Madhouse, audiobook




                                       
Part 2 of Ten Days in a Madhouse, audiobook

Reference/ Suggested reading:                                                                                                    
Chesler, P (1972). Women and madness. Garden City, NY: Doubleday.
Davar, B. V. (2008). From Mental Illness to Disability Choices for Women Users/Survivors of Psychiatry in Self and Identity Constructions. Indian journal of gender studies. 15(2), 261-290. Available at http://ijg.sagepub.com/content/15/2/261

Foucalt, M.(2006). History of Madness.  Edited by Jean Khalfa translated by Jonathan Murphy and Jean Khalfa. London. Routledge.

Foucault, M.(1979). Disciplined and Punish The Birth of the Prison Trans. Alan Sheridan. New York: Vintage/Random House.

Foucault,M.(1975). The Birth of the Clinic An Archeology of Medical Perception. Trans. A.M. Sheridan Smith. New York: Vintage/Random House

Kvale, S. (Ed.). (1992). Psychology and postmodernism (Vol. 9). Sage.

Lorde, A. (1978). Uses of the erotic: The erotic as power (No. 3). Crossing Pr.

Here is a the same essay in video format



Masson, J. (1992). Against Therapy. Glasgow. Fontana.

Plath, S. (2013). The bell jar (Vol. 50). GoodBook LLC.

Wetzel. J.W. (1991).Women's Experience Universal Mental Health Classification Systems: Reclaiming. 1991; 6; 8 Affilia. Retrieved from http://aff.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/6/3/8



Terms to look up
Sylvia Plath effect                                                                                                                           Neurosexim                                                                                                                              Psychologisation                                                                                                                                  Hysteria

  Women and madness -Activity.
Think of the last time you saw images or heard jokes about mad women think of what ideas were being conveyed. What impact did this have on you?
Think of the way the ‘crazy cat lady’ image/joke is used and how do you think it regulates women and their lives? Think of the many ways this image is used. 
To what extent do you think your understanding of both madness and women’s nature has been determined by psychology in the mass media. 


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