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Clinical Psychology, Patient Narratives
The Loony-Bin Trip by Kate Millett β€” book cover

The Loony-Bin Trip

by Kate Millett
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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Although long since diagnosed as manic depressive, Millett ( Sexual Politics ) in 1980 determined to discontinue her lithium medication. Prolix and digressive, fractured and brave, this memoir tracks the radical feminist's degenerative mental state. At her farm in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., her mania alienates her lover and sows discontent in the fledgling lesbian artists colony that resides there. Alongside radiant descriptions of physical labor in a natural environment are the squabbles of the artists and Millet's rhapsody on genitals--a horse's, which she fondles, and her father's--plus journal excerpts of one of the disillusioned artists. Her relatives and friends fail in attempts to commit her to a Manhattan institution; they succeed in Ireland for a time. The book masterfully conjures the ecstasy of mania, the despair of depression, and the anguish and shame of a hunted, paranoid, impotent person who is mentally ill. But Millett's identification with Joan of Arc and Irish political prisoners is unconvincing, as is her indictment of what she sees as the collusion of the mental health establishment and family in abrogating the civil rights of the mentally ill. (May)

Booknews

Millet, author of the landmark , tells of her struggle to regain control of her life after being diagnosed with manic depression. Haunted by recollections of two brief commitments to mental hospitals, she becomes increasingly terrified of being committed again. Her nightmares come true when she is confined to a mental hospital while traveling in Ireland. A new preface comments on recent movements for patients' rights and notes books that have begun to tread the still-taboo ground of psychiatric confinement. Lacks a subject index. Millet is a feminist activist and writer. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
August 1, 2000
Publisher
University of Illinois Press
Pages
316
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780252068881

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