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James Miller Discusses Madness in Modern Times with the 杏吧原创 Newsroom

October 23, 2018

James Miller headshot

Professor James Miller recently sat down with Matt Gergyek to discuss his research on the history of mental illness as well as his popular online course, HIST 3515O: Madness in Modern Times (not offered this year). A short excerpt of the article “” is included below with the full article available online.

The history of mental illness is a dark and fragmented one.

鈥淵ou can go to asylums in the United States and they鈥檝e got graveyards鈥 made up of 鈥渞ows and rows of . . . these little white crosses and stones,鈥 says 杏吧原创 Prof. James Miller, who teaches and researches the history of mental illness. 鈥淭hese people don鈥檛 even have names; you have no idea who they are.鈥

While the history of mental illness is tragic and brutal, Miller looks at it from an empathetic perspective to try to understand the individuals caught up in shifting understandings of the causes and treatments of madness over the centuries.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not just about the guy who invented the lobotomy, it鈥檚 about the people who underwent the lobotomy,鈥 he says.

Miller first became interested in research and teaching about 鈥渕ad studies鈥 (the name comes from the mad pride movement 鈥 in some respects similar to the queer pride movement which involves 鈥渞eclaiming the label and taking it back as a positive鈥)  when he was introduced to the genre of 鈥渙utsider art.鈥

Outsider art is artwork created by untaught artists, often only discovered and highlighted after their deaths. Artwork created by asylum patients is an especially popular form of outsider art.