'Bedlam!' The very name conjures up graphic images of naked patients
chained among filthy straw, or parading untended wards deluded that they
are Napoleon or Jesus Christ. We owe this image of madness to William
Hogarth, who, in plate eight of his 1735 Rake's Progress series, depicts
the anti-hero in Bedlam, the latest addition to a freak show providing
entertainment for Londoners between trips to the Tower Zoo, puppet shows
and public executions. That this is still the most powerful image of
Bedlam, over two centuries later, says much about our attitude to mental
illness, although the Bedlam of the popular imagination is long gone.
The hospital was relocated to the suburbs of Kent in 1930, and Sydney
Smirke's impressive Victorian building in Southwark took on a new role
as the Imperial War Museum. Following the historical narrative structure
of her acclaimed Necropolis, BEDLAM examines the capital's treatment of
the insane over the centuries, from the founding of Bethlehem Hospital
in 1247 through the heyday of the great Victorian asylums to the more
enlightened attitudes that prevail today.
Bedlam : London and its Mad - Catharine Arnold
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