In the episode, Rick calls in Murray SawChuck to help authenticate the piece, which he ultimately believes he does irrefutably via matching details (stitching, buttons, placement and style thereof) to a very high resolution vintage photo from January 1, 1915. The experimental ward in Family Life was based on ‘Villa 21’, a short-lived therapeutic community set up by David Cooper-the doctor who coined the term ‘anti-psychiatry’-in the 1960s at Shenley Hospital, Hertfordshire.Last week’s episode of Pawn Stars featured a gentleman who brought in a vintage straight jacket that he believed to have been owned by magician Harry Houdini. These films staged authentic depictions of ECT treatment filmed on location at real NHS hospitals, but also represented alterative therapeutic communities where psychotherapy and art therapy allowed individuals to express rather than repress their differences. Laing, who inspired Morgan! writer David Mercer and with whom he collaborated on his later screenplays for In Two Minds (1967) and Family Life (1971). The film should be understood in the context of the anti-psychiatry movement, which challenged coercive practices of modern psychiatry such as electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) as well as questioning the very idea of ‘madness’.Īnti-psychiatry is associated with key radical psychiatrists, most famously R.D. ![]() The image of him hoisted aloft in the straitjacket was used heavily in the film’s promotion, and not only symbolises psychiatry and society’s view of him as ‘mad’, but also evokes the spectacle and liberatory potential of Houdini’s escapes. This descent (or escape) into ‘madness’ sees Morgan admitted to a mental hospital in the film’s finale. Morgan: A Suitable Case for Treatment, 1966.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |