State of Madness : Psychiatry, Literature, and Dissent After Stalin /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Reich, Rebecca, author.
Imprint:Baltimore, Maryland : Project Muse, 2018
Dekalb [Illinois] : NIU Press, [2018]
Description:1 online resource (1 PDF (x, 283 pages))
Language:English
Series:NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies
NIU series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian studies.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12589870
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9781609092337
1609092333
9781501757600
1501757601
9780875807751
0875807755
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-275) and index.
Print version record.
Summary:What madness meant was a fiercely contested question in Soviet society. State of Madness examines the politically fraught collision between psychiatric and literary discourses in the years after Joseph Stalin's death. State psychiatrists deployed set narratives of mental illness to pathologize dissenting politics and art. Dissidents such as Aleksandr Vol'pin, Vladimir Bukovskii, and Semen Gluzman responded by highlighting a pernicious overlap between those narratives and their life stories. The state, they suggested in their own psychiatrically themed texts, had crafted an idealized view of reality that itself resembled a pathological work of art. In their unsanctioned poetry and prose, the writers Joseph Brodsky, Andrei Siniavskii, and Venedikt Erofeev similarly engaged with psychiatric discourse to probe where creativity ended and insanity began. Together, these dissenters cast themselves as psychiatrists to a sick society. By challenging psychiatry's right to declare them or what they wrote insane, dissenters exposed as a self-serving fiction the state's renewed claims to rationality and modernity in the post-Stalin years. They were, as they observed, like the child who breaks the spell of collective delusion in Hans Christian Andersen's story "The Emperor's New Clothes." In a society where normality means insisting that the naked monarch is clothed, it is the truth-teller who is pathologized. Situating literature's encounter with psychiatry at the center of a wider struggle over authority and power, this bold interdisciplinary study will appeal to literary specialists; historians of culture, science, and medicine; and scholars and students of the Soviet Union and its legacy for Russia today.
Other form:Print version: 0875807755 9780875807751