Insane Asylums Essays

  • Nineteenth Century Insane Asylums

    869 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nineteenth Century Insane Asylums No matter where they were, mad houses, or insane asylums, have the same basic features and functions. The views of asylum life changed drastically over the course of the nineteenth century. The growth of the number of mad houses during the nineteenth century is quite remarkable. Before 1810, only a few states had insane asylums. By 1850, most of the Northeastern and Midwestern states' legislatures supported having asylums. As early as 1860, 23 of the 33 existing

  • Insane Asylums

    1588 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Tales of Mental Asylums in Pennsylvania Once upon a time, long ago in the mists of time, sprawling brick structures housed countless individuals with mental disturbances. These massive structures were known to the world as mental asylums for the insane. In reality, the majorities of these individuals were not insane, but in contrast were suffering from mild mental problems such as depression or anxiety. These people were looked down upon in society and were labeled as "freaks" or "batty" because

  • Asylum Victims In Insane Asylum

    1268 Words  | 3 Pages

    Asylum Victims The main purpose of an insane asylum or mental hospital was to care for and provide treatment to the mentally ill. In the late 1800’s to early 1900’s this was not the case. Not only were the mentally ill forced to go into these institutions, but perfectly healthy people were admitted as well. Many of the perfectly healthy individuals, unfairly admitted, were women (Jean-Charles). These healthy women were placed in insane asylums simply because they were not an “obedient housewife

  • The History of Insane Asylums

    1706 Words  | 4 Pages

    hear the words “insane asylum”? Do such terms as lunatic, crazy, scary, or even haunted come to mind? More than likely these are the terminology that most of us would use to describe our perception of insane asylums. However, those in history that had a heart’s desire to treat the mentally ill compassionately and humanely had a different viewpoint. Insane asylums were known for their horrendous treatment of the mentally ill, but the ultimate purpose in the reformation of insane asylums in the nineteenth

  • History and Overview of Insane Asylums

    1763 Words  | 4 Pages

    decades the mentally ill or insane have been hated, shunned, and discriminated against by the world. They have been thrown into cruel facilities, said to help cure their mental illnesses, where they were tortured, treated unfairly, and given belittling names such as retards, insane, demons, and psychos. However, reformers such as Dorothea Dix thought differently of these people and sought to help them instead. She saw the inhumanity in these facilities known as insane asylums or mental institutions,

  • Insane Asylum Research Paper

    745 Words  | 2 Pages

    Insane asylums in the 1800s and 1900s were very . Patients were treated like lab rats, many left unclothed in the darkness with no heating or bathrooms (Dorothea). There were many different types of medical experiments that were conducted on people in insane asylums in the 1800s and 1900s. These experiments went from testing facial expressions to purposely injecting patients with the fever. All of these experiment had different effects on medicine today, whether they inspired new operations or they

  • Insane Asylums In The 20th Century

    647 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Insane asylums” were never really the happiest places. Before the late 20th century, people could be listed as mentally insane and sent to a psychiatric institution for the simplest of things, and those were sent to these “hospitals” were treated horribly. Patients were placed in bathtubs filled to the brim with boiling water, had parts of their brain removed, and numerous other ways were used to essentially torture these people. Near the middle of the 20th century, a lot of these institutions were

  • Creative Writing: Ophelia's Insane Asylum

    1485 Words  | 3 Pages

    Considering she didn’t have any homework, Alex went to the asylum and brought an Ouija board. A small voice in the back of Alex’s head cooed how there might be a possibility that the strange occurrence from last night might have something to do with this strange asylum. Taking one step onto the dead, brown grass, Alex’s bones started to shiver, hair roze, skin tingling. A few more steps she thought, then I will

  • Pennhurst Insane Asylum Case Study

    1004 Words  | 3 Pages

    perception, and rights than what they have now. There have been laws put in place in order to let the mentally disabled have more rights to their treatment and education. One psychiatric institution that dehumanized its patients was the Pennhurst Insane Asylum. According to Emily Smith Beitiks (2012), “3,500 patients were living in Pennhurst with only 600 workers to assist them.” With this low amount of workers it was very hard for patients to get the treatment they deserved.

  • Compare Foucault’s Treatment of the Insane with that of Goffman’s on Asylums

    1301 Words  | 3 Pages

    Foucault and Erving Goffman, together they give a delineation of the discourse of madness. This essay delves into both of these renowned sociologists, in an attempt to explore both Michel Foucault’s finding on the treatment of the insane and Erving Goffman’s work on asylums. It begins with a very deep and archival aspect on Foucault’s part; where close attention was paid to the evolution of language, words and the view of the mad. Foucault studied and researched in a more genealogical and archeological

  • Girl Interrupted And American Horror Story: Insane Asylum

    1971 Words  | 4 Pages

    negative way, whereas the characters who are carefree and have no emotional problems are seen in a more positive way. Media is significantly adding to the stigma of mental health. Movies and shows like, “Girl Interrupted” and “American Horror Story: Insane Asylum” portray hospitals in a way that has truth to it, however they portray the people in a negative way. It has become more known to society that the hospitals that the mentally ill are subjected to living in are not a good place to be. However, the

  • Ally McQuillen

    1397 Words  | 3 Pages

    Advocating Civility In both Golding's Lord of the Flies and Marquez's "I Only Came to Use the Phone" emerges what is more than a simplistic story but instead an avocation for the author's beliefs. These authors use several techniques such as plot and dialectical choice to exemplify their distaste for savagery. Both main characters, Ralph and Maria, transition from an individual in a new and isolated environment to a savage who is a part of this place. When looking at Golding and Marquez's techniques

  • Anylasis of Humbert

    1307 Words  | 3 Pages

    Humbert Humbert Humbert Humbert in the book Lolita is the type of person who will do anything to satisfy his needs. When Humbert is institutionalized in an insane asylum he toys with the doctors. Once he got to a certain age Humbert felt like he needed to get married to suppress his sexual desires, so he did. Later on Humbert realizes the only way he can be with Lolita is by marrying her mother, Charlotte. After Hubert loses his control on Lolita he gets the need to get revenge on the person who

  • One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest

    1099 Words  | 3 Pages

    One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest This film unlike most others on the same topic had no real event to focus on. There was not just one climax or specific scene that the others built up to or supported. I cannot say that I enjoyed it but I do feel it has to a great extent affected me. The only reason I feel that this film is one worth watching is because of the latent message it holds. It very successfully exposes authority and bureaucracy in society. The characters in this film portray people that

  • Reflective Essay: Christopher Columbus And Boarding School

    1050 Words  | 3 Pages

    the shelves, and I finally stumble across some pretty interesting books. I scan the bookcase and I picked up a Book with a old, grainy picture of an insane asylum upon the

  • John Clare and the Ubiquitous Editor

    2841 Words  | 6 Pages

    works of John Clare, from Clare’s own time until the present. An Invite to Eternity presents a model of that relationship between text and editor in microcosm, from its composition inside the walls of a mental institution to its transcription by an asylum attendant, to its early publication and its modern re-presentation today. Written in the 1840s, no extant manuscript of the poem exists in Clare’s own hand and each version of the poem is inflected by its editor in different but always significant

  • Analysis of In Madness and Civilization by Michel Foucault

    620 Words  | 2 Pages

    concluding with the treatment of the insane. As “madness” became part of everyday life, people of the time were though to be threatened by “madness”. This sense of threat resulted in the hiding of the “mad” in early day asylum or “mad house”, whose conditions were inhumane. As medicine evolved, and the conditions of the “mad” worsened; There was a distinction made between medicine and reason. Not all that were housed in these “mad houses” were mad. Some indeed were insane, but others were sick and their

  • Free Essays - Essay on Medea and Antigone

    578 Words  | 2 Pages

    to run hand in hand with being manipulative. Medea lied and cheated friends to try to acquire time in order to get what she wants. In this case what she wants is revenge agents her ex-husband. She tricks a friend to give her asylum in Athens after she has committed her insane task. Medea even goes so far as to be able to con Kreon, the king himself into giving her an extra day. This unwittingly gives her exactly what she needs. Antigone tries her hand at manipulation but is not as successful as Medea

  • Characters and Setting in Poe's Fall of The House of Usher

    993 Words  | 2 Pages

    his visit is so that he, Usher’s only friend, may provide some companionship which will ease Usher’s lonely, disturbed mind. The setting for this story takes place in what is known as the House of Usher. The house is reminiscent of a sovereign insane asylum. The family who has lived in the house for many years is described by Poe as having a stem with no branches (p.665). The occurrences which have taken place throughout the years of this family’s incessant and peculiar behavior give the house a life

  • Use Of The Diary Form Narrative in The Novel Dracula

    938 Words  | 2 Pages

    character is not feeling too great and is trying hide something, the reader knows this, and therefore the reader knows everything that is happening; nothing is being hidden from the reader. An example of this happening is when Mina is at the insane asylum and is worried sick about something happening to Jonathan Harker. Mina hides all that she feels when Jonathan Harker is near her. All that Mina is feeling is written by herself, and what, how she is feeling is ready for a reader to