Madness
Race and Insanity in a Jim Crow Asylum
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- USD 11.99
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- USD 11.99
Publisher Description
In the tradition of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, this New York Times bestseller is a page-turning account of one of the nation’s last segregated asylums..."a book that left me breathless" (Clint Smith).
For centuries, Black patients have been absent from our history books. Madness transports readers through the ninety-three-year history of Crownsville Hospital, one of the last segregated asylums with surviving records and a campus that still stands to this day in Anne Arundel County, Maryland. Antonia Hylton blends the intimate tales of patients and employees whose lives were shaped by Crownsville with a decade-worth of investigative research and archival documents. Madness chronicles the stories of Black families whose mental health suffered as they tried, and sometimes failed, to find safety and dignity. Hylton also grapples with her own family’s experiences with mental illness, and the secrecy and shame that it reproduced for generations.
As Crownsville Hospital grew from an antebellum-style work camp to a tiny city sitting on 1,500 acres, the institution became a microcosm of America’s evolving battles over slavery, racial integration, and civil rights. Hylton traces the legacy of slavery to the treatment of Black people’s bodies and minds in our current mental healthcare system. It is a captivating and heartbreaking meditation on how America decides who is sick or criminal, and who is worthy of our care or irredeemable.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Journalist Antonia Hylton’s painstakingly researched and emotionally devastating chronicle of a notorious segregated psychiatric facility shines a light on an overlooked piece of history. Starting in 1911, thousands of African Americans with psychological issues were sent to Maryland’s Crownsville Hospital, where they were warehoused, exploited, and abused for decades. Hylton focuses on the stories of the patients, many of them respected community members, who were subjected to shocking neglect while also being forced into labor for the hospital’s profit. And she exposes the racist theories about the workings of the African American mind being circulated at a time when slavery was still within living memory. Madness is a corrective and gripping work of history that inspires us to think hard about how we should support people in psychological distress.