Monday, October 21, 2019
Women and Madness â⬠exploring womenââ¬â¢s firsthand literary accounts and asking how the social context of gender impacts on the diagnosis of mental illness. The WritePass Journal
Women and Madness ââ¬â exploring womenââ¬â¢s firsthand literary accounts and asking how the social context of gender impacts on the diagnosis of mental illness. Introduction Women and Madness ââ¬â exploring womenââ¬â¢s firsthand literary accounts and asking how the social context of gender impacts on the diagnosis of mental illness. IntroductionThe yellow wall paperThorazine ShuffleThe loony-bin trip Reference listRelated Introduction In this essay I discuss three pieces of writing by women, reflecting on their experiences of medical treatment. Dating from 1898 to 1999 they explore the concepts and realities of women diagnosed with mental illness. I will mostly focus on the content of the pieces although discuss the imagery and metaphor that is repeated in all. The first piece ââ¬Å"The yellow wallpaperâ⬠by Charlotte Perkins Gilman is a work of semi autobiographical fiction, the other pieces ââ¬Å"Thorazine shuffleâ⬠by Allie Light and ââ¬Å"The Looney Bin trapâ⬠by Kate Millet are autobiographical accounts of episodes of care. I will discuss themes that reoccur through all pieces and contrast the differences experiences to build a picture of mental health care for women throughout these times. The yellow wall paper Written in 1892 by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, ââ¬Å"one of the most commanding feminists of her timeâ⬠(Hedges 1973 :119) at a time it was rare for women to address sexual politics, Gilman makes the link between gender, insanity and patriarchy. Gilman was a prominent activist and writer on social reform including ââ¬Å"Women and economicsâ⬠(1898) an analysis of the situation of women and a theoretical treatise that argued that women were ââ¬Å"subjugated by men, that motherhood should not preclude a women from working outside the homeâ⬠(Gilman 1898). The yellow wallpaper is a short story written in epistolary style as a series of first person journal entries. The journal describes the narratorââ¬â¢s experience of isolation during a period of ââ¬Å"rest cureâ⬠(Oppenheim 1991) for a ââ¬Å"temporary nervous depression ââ¬â a slight hysterical tendencyâ⬠(Gilman : 33). Hysteria from the Greek hysteron for uterus, was a female condition defined as relating to femininity and female sexuality a once common mental diagnosis of the 19th century it is no longer used as a diagnostic category (Micale 1993). ââ¬Å"Like all things feminine (hysteria) seemed elusive and enigmatic to a patriarchal medical profession and was resistant to male rationalityâ⬠(Showalter 2007). A Neurologist and progressive thinker of the 19th century, Horatio Bryan Donkin, linked the complaint not just to femalesââ¬â¢ physicality but to her ââ¬Å"social conditionsâ⬠. Donkin also noted a high propensity for hysteria among unconventional women, namely writers and artist (Showalter :145.) In this period doctors linked female ambition to mental illness warning that ââ¬Å"pursuits of new opportunities (in work and fulfilment) would lead to sickness, sterility and race suicide (Showalter :121). The tale describes the narrators gradual decent to madness. A feminist stance can and should be read into the novel considering the author; the themes of restriction and confinement echo the experiences of women of this time. Throughout the tale the narrator acts as prisoner, but a prisoner of her husbandââ¬â¢s patriarchy not her own madness. Her husband forbids her to exercise her imagination in any way (Gilman: 34, 35, 36).à She rebels and, deprived of any other stimulation turns imagination on to neutral objects in an attempt to ignore her increasing frustrations (Gilman: 34). Her preoccupation with the paper begins at first with dislike of the pattern, building to her seeing the pattern as bars with a creeping skulking female figure behind (Gilman: 40). à Her negativity colours all she describes, ââ¬Å"I never saw a worse paper in all my lifeâ⬠¦ (its sprawling pattern) committing every artistic sinâ⬠. The idea of sin is pertinent, as is her description of the pa pers colour as ââ¬Å"repellent, unclean yellowâ⬠a ââ¬Å"sickly sulphurâ⬠à (Gilman:35). These themes of illness, un-cleanliness and unnaturalness echo ideas of blame and questions of morality with pervaded the culture at this time. à She reflects John makes her angry (Gilman: 34), and attributes this to her condition. She speaks of the effort it takes to dress or entertain, she blames herself saying she wishes she could help John (to make her better). She reflects John doesnââ¬â¢t know how much she suffers, simply that he knows there is ââ¬Å"no reason and that this satisfies himâ⬠(Gilman:35). Our narrator is intelligent and educated, she knows a ââ¬Å"little of designâ⬠(Gilman:39). Frustrated by her lack of intellectual stimulation (Gilman :36), she is excited by the paper watching it gives her something to look forward to. John says she is getting better despite the paper (Gilman: 42) she doesnââ¬â¢t tell him she feels itââ¬â¢s because of the paper (Gilman: 43) for she fears he will take this away from it.à This seems to suggest that life outside the room is equally if not more dull than it is now inside with her preoccupation. The more the wallpaper occupies her, the more reality retreats. Her dissociation begins as she starts to hide her true feelings from the real world. Gilman was sent home after a month of rest treatment with instruction never touch a pen, brush or pencil as long as you live (Knight: 323). We see this element to the cure in Johnââ¬â¢s insistence that she doesnââ¬â¢t write. We see also the prevailing theory of the time in Jennie ââ¬Å"a perfect and enthusiastic housekeeper, and hopes for no better professionâ⬠¦she thinks it is the writing which makes me sick!â⬠(Gilman: 37). The idea of writing as therapy the narrator offers ââ¬Å"I think only if I was well enough to write a little it would relieve the press of ideas and rest meâ⬠(Gilman: 36) opposes prevailing medical belief that linked female ambition to mental illness (Showalter :121). At this time psychiatrists were concerned with a moral cure for hysteria. Victorian Psychiatrist Henry Maudsley said ââ¬Å"there is sex in mind as distinctly as there is sex in bodyâ⬠.à The pervading thought at this time was that Mental illness would come if women tried to defy their ââ¬Å"natureâ⬠and try to act as equal to men in society rather than as companions.à Dr Edward C. Mann wrote in a medical journal in 1980 ââ¬Å"The mental condition of women with hysteria is somewhat peculiar. The patient, when the hysterical feelings come upon her, does not feel disposed to make the slightest effort to resist them, and yields to her emotions, whatever they may beâ⬠¦she cares nothing for her duties and seemingly takes pleasure in exaggerating all her slight discomforts and annoyances, and be her suspicious exacting and unreasonable behaviour makes life generally uncomfortable to those about her.â⬠(Shannonhouse: XIII). Through illness the narrator is absolved of her obligations but as punishment or moral reminder of her duties she is placed in the nursery. Here, with little other stimulation, she becomes fixated on the wallpaper beginning with dislike for its appearance, moving from identifying secret meaning it its pattern to being excited by its hidden world. Considering Gilmanââ¬â¢s feminist ideals, her experiences of mental illness and her understanding of the cause of this, as well as her experience of receiving the ââ¬Å"rest cureâ⬠we can read the creeping woman (Gilman:40) in the paper as allegory for womanââ¬â¢s place in society. The bars she sees in the paper (Gilman: 42) being representative of the constraints of society and marriage (Gilman 1935:5) The narrators husband John also her physician treats her not as his wife but as patient and as child; we see this in his language to her ââ¬Å"blessed little gooseâ⬠(Gilman: 36) ââ¬Å"What is it little girlâ⬠¦Bless her little heart!she shall be as sick as she pleases!â⬠(Gilman: 37). Of all the rooms in the house it is the former nursery she is confined to despite her protests. The narrator speaks early on status of their marriage, immediately seeking to place this in context of social norm ââ¬Å"John laughs at me of course, but one expects that in marriageâ⬠(Gilman :32). The narrator suggests that John as physician is the reason she does not make a quick recovery (Gilman: 33). In this way both author and narrator demonstrate insight to female mental illness and to the role that both patriarchy and medicine play. à Today a prominent part of the treatment of the mentally ill is socialisation and integration with daily activities not isolation. Gilman shows us the separation of the narratorsââ¬â¢ consciousness in her secret journal as the story moves gradually towards climax, from the first mention of the wall paper until it builds to consume her thoughts and writing. Through her sickness the narrator is relinquished of her own parental and marital responsibilities. ââ¬Å"Mary is so good with the baby. Such a dear baby! And yet I cannot be with him, it makes me so nervous.â⬠(Gilman:35). The narrator struggles to not creep and to maintain her independence and autonomy, however the weight of guilt she experiences at neglecting her moral obligations as ââ¬Å"he said I was letting it get the better of me and that nothing was worse for a nervous patient than to give way to such fanciesâ⬠(Gilman: 35) coupled withà the punishment of isolation slowly drives her mad.à Gilman herself accredited her illness to marriage and motherhood (Gilman 1935). We can read the narrators madness as a choice, she chooses madness over returning to her obligation but in this choice we can hear Gilmanââ¬â¢s critique of womenââ¬â¢sââ¬â¢ options at this time -Madness or compliance.à In her autobiography Gilman says she sent a copy to Weir Mitchell, who chose not to comment she later learned however that he had revised his treatment (Gilman 1935). Thorazine Shuffle Written in 1999 Light reflects on her treatment in a mental institution 1963, she says ââ¬Å"I was twenty seven when I began having the blues, not feeling in control of my life. I needed help with my children. I was afraid I didnââ¬â¢t know how to be a motherâ⬠.à The theme of motherhood, and expected role are echoed here from the previous piece as is the authors fixations with descriptions of light ââ¬Å"the particular slant of the lightâ⬠¦the quality of late afternoon lightâ⬠¦refracted on wallsâ⬠(Light: 168) we can compare this to the narrator in The Yellow Wallpaper preoccupations with light ââ¬Å"you can only see it in certain lightsâ⬠(Gilman: 38) ââ¬Å"when the cross light fades and the low sun shines directlyâ⬠(Gilman: 39).à ââ¬Å"I watch for that first long, straight rayâ⬠(Gilman: 42). Also, her desire to set her belongings on fire (Light: 168) is again echoed in yellow wallpaper ââ¬Å"I thought seriously of burning the houseà ¢â¬ (Gilman: 44). Light like Gilman, tells how in illness her morality is called into question. She describes how her first meeting with her male psychiatrist involves her naked in a gown on a bed and him asking her questions of a sexual nature ââ¬Å"do you like kissing your husbandââ¬â¢s penis?â⬠(:169) She reflects there was no right answer to this question, both called her nature into repute, either ââ¬Å"frigid or a whoreâ⬠(Light: 169). She describes her embarrassment and her shame. Here we see that a woman questioning her place in patriarchal systems is still a consideration in diagnosing female mental illness. Within the ward itself Light describes a war, between the depressives and the manic patients ââ¬Å"two battling armiesâ⬠(169). She describes the sphere of influence within the Hospital as feudal system; the choice of language paints a vivid picture. ââ¬Å"Langley Porter was a serfdom. Doctors came as trainees and we became their propertyâ⬠¦even as these potentates profited from the shambles of our lives we trusted themâ⬠(171). The language shows the divide between practitioner and patient and the authority of the former. ââ¬Å"Potentates profitedâ⬠ââ¬â the power relationship is reinforced by the alliteration and the choice of words; Potentates ââ¬â people with power and authority -who donââ¬â¢t simple make a living but profit from their patients. The word serfdom creates an image of the hospital as farm with patients as dumb animals to be worked and sold. ââ¬Å"I was given to Dr. Schwartzâ⬠(171), again the passivity is shown in the language, given to not assign to. The author uses the language of child or victim, a supplicant powerless to affect change.à ââ¬Å"if I behaved myself I could sleep at homeâ⬠.(171)à ââ¬Å"Our contract began with the removal of clothesâ⬠(171). The use of ââ¬Å"contractâ⬠suggests a business transaction; the passivity of the statement seems to reflect a blunting of emotion in the face of the oppressive environment. The imagery has a sexualised overtone. ââ¬Å"I had entered a kindergarten of managed playâ⬠¦the physical therapist pressed upon us the need to practice looking beautifulâ⬠again the merging of ideas of childlike helplessness and adult sexuality. ââ¬Å"With our uncombed hair and unfocused vision, we sleep walked the corridors with books on our heads to improve out postureâ⬠. The idea that this is a legitimate treatment feels preposterous in light of modern treatment. Themes of gender, responsibility and obligation of the earlier piece are echoed here. Even in chaos the obligation to be thought beautiful and to work towards this goal. ââ¬Å"There is no way a patient, using her own words, can logically convince a doctor that she knows something about her person. He has to see for himself and then, if the patient doesnââ¬â¢t die, she might have won her point.â⬠The helplessness is overwhelming. The author says ââ¬Å"patientâ⬠but her use of ââ¬Å"her own wordsâ⬠¦her pointâ⬠add to the argument that it is woman as patient, female as supplicant to male the social norm in a patriarchal society which psychiatry still was at this time. ââ¬Å"He said I would feel better if I looked at himâ⬠¦ I obeyed Dr Schwartz. I wanted to be a good girlâ⬠¦so I would do whatever that entailedI often told Dr Schwartz that I needed something in my lifeâ⬠¦Something of my ownâ⬠¦I wanted to go to schoolâ⬠¦his reply was ââ¬Å"if you canââ¬â¢t stay home and look after your children, then get a job. Donââ¬â¢t waste everyoneââ¬â¢s time by going to collegeâ⬠. Experienced 64 years after the writing of Yellow Wallpaper the idea as female as equal and deserving of education and experience is still seen as dismissible. The loony-bin trip In Milletââ¬â¢s account her first description a treatment and of oppression comes from a woman ââ¬Å"tonight big nurse found me outâ⬠¦her instinct grabbed for meâ⬠¦and found the pill still in my cheek. I could confront or swallow. I decided to confrontâ⬠(Millet :98). Hers is the most recent account of admission and her opponent female, perhaps this is what leads her to confront her treatment openly, unlike her counterparts. Her opposition is no good however, she is medicated. Here again we see women as powerless ââ¬Å"Annââ¬â¢s husband put her here, Maryââ¬â¢s in-laws, Margaretââ¬â¢s own motherâ⬠(100) although this time other women are complaisant in this forced incarceration and treatment. A female nurse ââ¬Å"â⬠¦who treat us as defective childrenâ⬠¦more like convicted felonsâ⬠(99) administers medication. Millet talks of ââ¬Å"being in the hard lock of Dr.Strong foreverâ⬠(103). The patriarchy she feels suppresses her is religious ââ¬Å"You are in the hands of the church you ran away fromâ⬠¦despite the presence of state it is Rome that has you prisonerâ⬠¦you little American freedom fighter business quite over, womenââ¬â¢s lib and other notions crunched like cellophaneâ⬠( 103). ââ¬Å"Joan of Arc, a heretic. Every night I will be tortured thusâ⬠¦they will inoculate me with this horrorâ⬠¦our great sad room of waking women, each a prisoner of her mind and body.â⬠(104). Millet born 1934 is an American feminist writer and activist. Best known for her 1970 book ââ¬Å"Sexual Politicsâ⬠, she won a trial to prove her sanity and changed the state of Minnesota commitment law (Time 1970). Although in this age, 1970 women fight against their oppression ââ¬Å"After a certain time many victims collapse and agree to be crazy; they surrender.â⬠(Millet: 100). This new treatment environment is as toxic as the rest cure Millet describes it as ââ¬Å"an irrational deprivation of every human needâ⬠asking if the cure for madness is fear and if the fear of being a captive might motivate recovery (101). Sleep is a reoccurring theme of all three pieces. Gilmanââ¬â¢s physician wants the protagonist to get more of it, Light describes how ââ¬Å"I was put to sleepâ⬠(Light:169) Millet recounts ââ¬Å"I wonââ¬â¢t need anything to sleep. No, really. No. And the needle jabs your rear like an insult and the white stupor comes overâ⬠(Millet :102). Both light and Millet describe how ââ¬Å"a mental patient was not allowed to refuse medication. We were warned to take it orally or it will be injectedâ⬠(Light: 172). This theme of women as defective or broken, for arguing with oppression and wanting different experiences from their lives reoccurs though all three accounts. Hard to fathom treatments with illogical cures acting to reprogram women to ââ¬Å"behaveâ⬠by fear and boredom appears in all,à As the ideas of childlike powerlessness and of being property are also repeated.à à ââ¬Å"there have always been those who argue womenââ¬â¢s high rate of mental disorder is a product of their social situations, their confining roles as daughters, wives and mothers and their mistreatment by a male dominated and possibly misogynistic psychiatric professionâ⬠(Showalter:3). Depression and anxiety are twice as prevalent in women as in men (Busfield 1996) and inequalities of gender create dependence and powerlessness in women. Because relationships between patients and staff reflect those in society the work force is often blind to inequality (DH 2002) and this is clearly highlighted in the suffocating treatment all three women experience. ââ¬Å"There are differences in the family and social context of womenââ¬â¢s and menââ¬â¢s livesâ⬠¦mental health care must be responsive to these differencesâ⬠(Jacqui Smith, minister of mental health; department of health 2002). Light tells us she comes from a line of depressives, passed down through the female line and again reiterates the connections between motherhood and depression. Light reflects on the history of depression on the female side of her family ââ¬Å"My grandmother gave birth to nine childrenâ⬠¦her despair at perpetual pregnancy was contagiousâ⬠¦My mother was a small girl when her mother tried to hang herself from the kitchen rafters. Pregnant againâ⬠. Her motherââ¬â¢s favourite bed time story was about a little girl afraid of being stolen from her bed, the mother promises the girl will be safe but the girl is still stolen. The learned helplessness in their situations is passed down with each generation.à The author reflects that all the stories her mother told her were about the consequences of looking, Blue beards wife looks it the locked room and seals her fate to join the dead wives there. Psyche looks at her lover after being bidden to love in the dark and loses him to death. In reality they are all about the consequences of defying patriarchal dictate. Gilman , writing at a time when it was uncommon for women to have a voice, as an active feminist who divorced she still had to adhere to the confines of her society, her story then is a cautionary tale against womenââ¬â¢s madness, its roots and its treatments. In all accounts relatives exist as diminished characters over powered by the protagonists madness, this overpowering seems to be a release from the pressures and constraints all three women feel in their lives. Reference list Busfield,J., 1996 Men, Women and Madness Understanding Gender and mental disorder. London :Macmillian Press Ltd Chesler, P., 1997. (3rd ed) Women and madness. New York: Fall Walls Eight Windows Department of health (2002) Womens mental health : into the mainstream accessed at dh.gov.uk/prod_consum_dh/groups/dh_digitalassets/@dh/@en/documents/digitalasset/dh_4075487.pdf à On 31/3/11 Hedges. E,R., 1973 Afterword. The Yellow Wallpaper. New York: The Feminist Press Knight, D,D,. 1994 The Diaries of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia Light, A., 1999 ââ¬Å"Thorazine Shuffleâ⬠à in Shannonhouse, R,.ed. (2000) Out of her Mind: Women Writing on Madness: New York: The Modern Library Micale, M.S., 1993 On the ââ¬Å"Disappearanceâ⬠of hysteria: A Study in the Clinical Deconstruction of Diagnosis .The history of Science Society. ISIS. 84:496-526 Millet, K., 1990 The Loony-Bin Trip in Shannonhouse, R,.ed. (2000) Out of her Mind: Women Writing on Madness: New York: The Modern Library Oppenheim, J,. 1991 Shattered Nerves: Doctors, Patients and Depression in Victorian England. Oxford: Oxford University Press Perkins Gilman, C., 1891 The Yellow Wallpaper.in Shannonhouse, R,.ed. (2000) Out of her Mind: Women Writing on Madness: New York: The Modern Library Perkins Gilman, C., 1898 Women and economics. New York: Cosmobooks Perkins Gilman, C.,1935 à The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman: An Autobiography. (3rd Ed) London: The University of Wisconsin Press Shannonhouse. R. (ed) ,2000 Out of her Mind : women writing on madness. New York: The Modern Library. Showalter, E., 2007 The Female Malady- Women, Madness and English Culture 1830- 1980. London: Virago Press Time magazine, 1970 The liberation of Kate Millet. Accessed on 31.3.11 @ time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,876784-1,00.html
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.