Shakespeare and Insane Asylums

Shakespeare and Insane Asylums

"Though this be madness, yet there is method in ’t." (Hamlet, 2.2.223) Plenty of people today consider Shakespeare a literary genius, a pillar of theater history, a gifted writer of timeless love poems, and more. But even the most over-the-top contemporary admirer of Shakespeare is unlikely to consider him a pioneer of modern medical science... much less forensic psychiatry. Hard as it may be to believe, however, there was a strange period in American history when that's exactly how William Shakespeare was seen in both law and medicine. Rebecca Sheir, host of the Shakespeare Unlimited series, interviews Benjamin Reiss, a professor in the English department at Emory University and the author of a book called "Theaters of Madness: Insane Asylums and Nineteenth-Century American Culture." "From the mid-1840s through about the mid-1860s in the United States, during the first generation of American psychiatry, no figure was cited as an authority on insanity and mental functioning more frequently than William Shakespeare," says Reiss. Such citations were not just in medical journals, he adds, but in sworn legal testimony. The reason, we learn in this podcast, was essentially this: Modern psychiatry was a fledgling field, regarded with distrust and little respect by many Americans. What it needed, above all, was authority—and what better, more respected authority than the great playwright? Join us to explore this curious yet fascinating intersection between civil society and William Shakespeare. ------------------- From the Shakespeare Unlimited podcast series. © Folger Shakespeare Library. All rights reserved. Produced for the Folger Shakespeare Library by Richard Paul. Garland Scott is associate producer. Edited by Gail Kern Paster and Esther Ferington. Recorded by Toby Schreiner.

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Rita Dove on Shakespeare and Her Poem of Welcome for the Folger

When the Folger reopens on June 21 and you come to take a walk in our new west garden, look down at the garden bed. There, you'll see a new poem, written for the Folger by US Poet Laureate emerita Rit...

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John Guy And Julia Fox on Their New Biography of Anne Boleyn

John Guy And Julia Fox on Their New Biography of Anne Boleyn

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16 Tammi 202433min

David and Ben Crystal Share Shakespeare Quotations for Your Everyday Life

David and Ben Crystal Share Shakespeare Quotations for Your Everyday Life

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2 Tammi 202435min

What Happened to the Princes in the Tower, with Philippa Langley

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The most unforgivable crime in Richard III has to be when the king orders the murder of his two young nephews, Edward and Richard. But what if Richard III was framed? Philippa Langley is the amateur ...

19 Joulu 202333min

Will Somer: Peter K. Andersson on Henry VIII's Court Fool

Will Somer: Peter K. Andersson on Henry VIII's Court Fool

What comes to mind when you think about a "court jester?"  What if we told you that fools in the Tudor court didn’t look or sound anything like the zany clowns you have in mind? Historians don’t know...

5 Joulu 202331min

Isabelle Schuler on Lady Macbeth and Queen Hereafter

Isabelle Schuler on Lady Macbeth and Queen Hereafter

Isabelle Schuler’s debut novel Queen Hereafter attempts to fill in a backstory for Lady Macbeth. The book takes place in 11th century Scotland, where a king’s reign tended to be short and brutal. For ...

21 Marras 202330min

400 Years of Shakespeare's First Folio, with Emma Smith

400 Years of Shakespeare's First Folio, with Emma Smith

The First Folio—the first collected edition of Shakespeare’s plays—hit bookstores 400 years ago this November. Emma Smith of Oxford University tells us just what this famous book has been up to for th...

7 Marras 202329min

The Bloomsbury Group and Shakespeare, with Marjorie Garber

The Bloomsbury Group and Shakespeare, with Marjorie Garber

We talk with Harvard Professor Marjorie Garber about how modernist writers of London’s Bloomsbury Group made Shakespeare their own. Garber’s most recent book—her twentieth—is Shakespeare in Bloomsbury...

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