Women Driven Mad  Paid

Women’s Madness in English and American Literature

by Gönül Bakay (Author), Handan Dedehayir (Author)
©2022, Edited Collection, 252 Pages
English Studies

HARDCOVER

eBook


This book offers an in-depth analysis as to how and why women have been widely
associated with madness since ancient times. The first part of the book comprises a
historical survey of various perceptions of madness across the centuries, while the
second part of the book covers a wide selection of literary works by American and
English writers who dealt with this subject in their works. In this part of the book,
the authors examine selected works of literature from a feminist perspective by
also drawing on the works of influential theorists of feminist criticism. The authors
further show how these writers, who have been influenced by various philosophers
and theoreticians, critically examine women’s madness in their fiction.
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the author
  • About the book
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Contents
  • Foreword
  • Introduction: The Image of the “Madwoman” as a Discourse of Power
  • Madness: Yesterday and Today
  • Madness Throughout History
    • Madness in the Ancient Greek World
    • Madness in the Roman Period and the Middle Ages
    • Madness in Islamic and Turkish Civilizations
    • Meanwhile, in the West...
    • Reform Movements in the 19th Century and Psychiatry
    • Madness in the 20th Century
    • Mental Illness Today
  • Women and Madness
    • Women and Hysteria
    • Women and Schizophrenia
    • Women and Depression
    • Female Psychologists
  • What has Changed since Yesterday?
    • Gaslighting
  • Social Origins of Women’s Madness in Our Age
    • Women and Madness in English and American Literature
  • Madness in Medieval English Literature
    • John Gower
    • Geoffrey Chaucer
    • Margery Kempe
  • William Shakespeare: The Master of All Times
    • Hamlet
    • Macbeth
    • Taming of the Shrew
  • Women in the 18th Century
    • Mary Wollstonecraft
    • Maria: A Fiction
  • Women in 19th Century Literature
    • Sir Walter Scott
      • The Bride of Lammermoor
    • Emily Brontë
      • Wuthering Heights
    • Charlotte Brontë
      • Jane Eyre
      • Villette
    • Mary Elizabeth Braddon
      • Lady Audley’s Secret
    • Charles Dickens
      • Great Expectations
    • Dickens’ Other Works
    • William Wilkie Collins
      • The Woman in White
    • Charlotte Perkins Gilman
      • The Yellow Wallpaper
  • Women and Madness in Modern Literature
    • Virginia Woolf
      • Mrs. Dalloway
    • Jean Rhys
      • Wide Sargasso Sea
    • Daphne du Maurier
      • Rebecca
    • Doris Lessing
      • The Four-Gated City
      • The Golden Notebook
      • The Grass is Singing
    • Kate Millett
      • The Loony-Bin Trip
    • Phyllis Chesler
      • Women and Madness
    • Marge Piercy
      • Woman on the Edge of Time
    • Joanne Greenberg
      • I Never Promised You a Rose Garden
    • Nawal El Saadawi
      • God Dies by the Nile
    • Margaret Atwood
      • Alias Grace
    • Kay Redfield Jamison
      • An Unquiet Mind
    • Joan Didion
      • Play It as It Lays
    • Stephen King
      • Misery
    • Sebastian Faulks
      • Human Traces
    • Shirley Hardie Jackson
      • The Haunting of Hill House
    • Sylvia Plath
      • The Bell Jar
    • Elizabeth Flock
      • Me and Emma
    • Susanna Kaysen
      • Girl Interrupted
  • Conclusion
  • References
  • Index
Pages:
252
Year:
2022
ISBN (HARDBACK):
9783631873458 (Active)
ISBN (EPUB):
9783631876381 (Active)
ISBN (PDF):
9783631876329 (Active)
Language:
English
Published:
Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Warszawa, Wien, 2022. 252 pp.

Gönül Bakay is a professor at Bahçes¸ehir University, Turkey. Her teaching expertise
covers women’s studies, Gothic novel and English literature from the 18th century
to the present. She is a member of the Women’s Studies Center of I˙stanbul University,
of M.S.E.A, BSECS and a member of the board of directors of K.A.D. (Cultural
Studies Club).


Handan Dedehayır, who has managed the publishing and translation activities of
various institutions following her education in psychology, provided a background
to the examples of women’s madness in English and American literature that is the
backbone of the book.

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