The lives they left behind Suitcases from a state hospital attic

Darby Penney

Book - 2008

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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 362.21/Penney Due May 4, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Bellevue Literary Press 2008.
Language
English
Main Author
Darby Penney (-)
Other Authors
Peter Stastny (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
205 p. : ill. (some col.), ports. ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. [190]-196) and index.
ISBN
9781934137079
  • Foreword
  • Prologue: Life in the Attic
  • 1. He Took Them on Their Last Walk
  • 2. Who Went to Willard and Why Did They Go There?
  • 3. How I Would Have Furnished My Room (If Not for the Voices)
  • 4. In Permanent Limbo: She Kept Asking for Dispensation (Until Her Doctor Turned into the Devil Incarnate)
  • 5. Children Died and She Knit Her Life Away
  • 6. Like a Fly in a Spider Web
  • 7. How People Were Treated at Willard
  • 8. A Photographic Talent: Rising Above the Fray
  • 9. A Frequent Visitor to the White House
  • 10. My Blood Temper...Resigned
  • 11. An Italian Princess and a French Intellectual: Two Ways of Fighting for Freedom
  • Epilogue: Is It Better Today?
  • Sources
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

When New York's 120-plus-year-old mental institution Willard State Hospital was closed down in 1995, New York Museum curator Craig Williams found a forgotten attic filled with suitcases belonging to former inmates. He informed Penney, co-editor of The Snail's Pace Review and a leading advocate of patients rights, who recognized the opportunity to salvage the memory of these institutionalized lives. She invited Stastny, a psychiatrist and documentary filmmaker, to help her curate an exhibit on the find and write this book, which they dedicate to "the Willard suitcase owners, and to all others who have lived and died in mental institutions." What follows are profiles of 10 individual patients whose suitcase contents proved intriguing (there were 427 bags total), referencing their institutional record-including histories and session notes-as well as some on-the-ground research. A typical example is Ethel Smalls, who likely suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder as a result of her husband's abuse; misdiagnosed and institutionalized against her will, she lived at Willard until her death in 1973. While the individual stories are necessarily sketchy, the cumulative effect is a powerful indictment of healthcare for the mentally ill. 25 color and 63 b&w photographs. (Jan.) Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.