Madness is something that frightens and fascinates us
all. It is a word with which we are universally
familiar, and a condition that haunts the human
imagination. Through the centuries, in poetry and in
prose, in drama and in the visual arts, its depredations
are on display for all to see. A whole industry has
grown up, devoted to its management and suppression.
Madness profoundly disturbs our common sense
assumptions; threatens the social order, both
symbolically and practically; creates almost unbearable
disruptions in the texture of daily living; and turns
our experience and our expectations upside down. Lunacy,
insanity, psychosis, mental illness - whatever term we
prefer, its referents are disturbances of reason, the
passions, and human action that frighten, create chaos,
and yet sometimes amuse; that mark a gulf between the
common sense reality most of us embrace, and the
discordant version some humans appear to experience.
Social responses to madness, our interpretations of what
madness is, and our notions of what is to be done about
it have varied remarkably over the centuries.In this
Very Short Introduction, Andrew Scull provides a
provocative and entertaining examination of the social,
cultural, medical, and artistic responses to mental
disturbance across more than two millennia, concluding
with some observations on the contemporary accounts of
mental illness. |
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