
@article{ref1,
title="&quot;May all be shattered into god&quot;: Mary Barnes and her journey through madness in Kingsley Hall",
journal="Journal of medical humanities",
year="2018",
author="Chapman, Adrian",
volume="ePub",
number="ePub",
pages="ePub-ePub",
abstract="Contributing to renewed scholarly interest in R. D. Laing and his circle, and in the radical therapeutic community of Kingsley Hall, London (1965-1970), this article offers the first article-length reading of Mary Barnes' and Joseph Berke's Mary Barnes: Two Accounts of a Journey through Madness. This text offers views of anti-psychiatry 'on the ground' that critique the 1960s utopianism of Laing's championing of madness as a metanoic, quasi-psychedelic voyage. Barnes' story, too, reveals tensions within the anti-psychiatric movement. Moving beyond existing criticism of the text, Barnes, it is argued here, emerges as far more than an exemplary patient, victim or anti-psychiatric puppet. Particular attention is paid in this reading of Two Accounts to the following: the ways in which the spiritually inclined Barnes and the psychoanalytic Berke differ in this dual narrative text; the ways in which each differs from Laing; the metaphor of the journey; and the setting of Barnes' story in the often conflicted, experimental household of Kingsley Hall.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1041-3545",
doi="10.1007/s10912-018-9517-1",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10912-018-9517-1"
}