Available Formats
A History of Delusions: The Glass King, a Substitute Husband and a Walking Corpse
By (Author) Victoria Shepherd
Oneworld Publications
Oneworld Publications
3rd October 2023
1st June 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Popular psychology
History: plagues, diseases, famines
Popular science
Abnormal psychology
Psychiatric nursing / Mental health nursing
Dreams and their interpretation
Psychology: states of consciousness
Psychology: the self, ego, identity, personality
Psychiatric and mental disorders
616.89
Paperback
352
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 26mm
Fascinating and compassionate Horatio Clare The King of France thinking he was made of glass was terrified he might shatterand he wasnt alone. After the Emperor met his end at Waterloo, an epidemic of Napoleons piled into Frances asylums. Throughout the nineteenth century, dozens of middle-aged women tried to convince their physicians that they were, in fact, dead. For centuries weve dismissed delusions as something for doctors to sort out behind locked doors. But delusions are more than just bizarre quirks they hold the key to collective anxieties and traumas. In this groundbreaking history, Victoria Shepherd uncovers stories of delusions from medieval times to the present day and implores us to identify reason in apparent madness.
A varied and thought-provoking journey.
-- The TimesFascinating and compassionate.
-- Horatio Clare, author of Heavy LightRiveting case histories grounded in context and narrated with novelistic verve and impressive authority.
-- Julie Kavanagh, author of The Irish AssassinsAn utterly engrossing book. It reaches through layers of mania and the distance of centuries to connect you completely to its subjects, such that you miss them when they're gone.
-- Zoe WilliamsMeticulously researched this is a good time to take delusions seriously.
-- Daily Express'A humane and thoughtful account.'
-- Washington PostThis absorbing study Shepherd goes beyond formal, detached accounts by physicians, trying instead to get a glimpse of whole human beings whose lives unravelled through trauma into delusional thinking a humane, attentive exploration of locked-in worlds inhabited by people whose mental certainties could be both comforting and terrifying.
-- BBC History MagazineA timely reminder that nothing is new, just how we deal with it. Shepherd's evocative descriptions take you from seventeenth-century Oxford to twentieth-century Paris with detail as rich as the stories she uncovers. Thought-provoking as well as deeply informative.
-- Annie Gray, author of Victory in the KitchenEach chapter opens with a compelling portrait of someone whose life was consumed, even destroyed, by a false idea Poignant... By looking back on historical examples of the phenomenon, Shepherd shows both the mistakes and triumphs of the past, which should inform more compassionate, dignified treatment of the mentally ill in the future. From fourteenth-century England to twentieth-century France, A History of Delusions examines the thin, blurry line between sanity and insanity.
* Foreword Reviews *In this bewitching debut, Shepherd adapts her BBC Radio 4 series of the same name, providing a delightfully strange account of delusions Reminiscent of Oliver Sacks, Shepherd opts for empathy over prurience, highlighting the humanity of her subjects and lucidly drawing out the dream logic by which their delusions operate. This is a wondrous reminder of the intricacy and paradox of the human mind.
-- Publishers Weekly, Books of the WeekFascinating and bizarre, these thoughtful case studies serve as escape hatches into the past, revealing the historical preoccupations that may have given rise to these delusions.
* Publishers Weekly, Summer Reads 2022 *Confidently and pacily, and with an intimate tone driven by the books incarnation as a BBC Radio 4 series, Shepherd unpacks each case story to identify the reasons behind the purported loss of reason Through these histories Shepherd aims to build our own connection with, and understanding of, people whose delusions may on first encounter seem bizarre: through the stories they tell themselves, they perhaps tell us at a time that often seems out of joint, even deranged about the stories we tell ourselves.
-- Dr Philip Sidney, Catholic HeraldA compelling series of individual case studies fascinating Shepherd is an excellent guide, offering concise accounts of specific diagnoses and a particularly absorbing account of the work of French asylum doctor Philippe Pinel we close the book convinced of her central message: delusions are not signs of madness, but important and compelling phenomena.
-- Fortean TimesVictoria Shepherd conceived and produced the ten-part series A History of Delusions for BBC Radio 4. She has produced scores of documentaries and major strands for BBC Radio 4. She holds an MA in creative writing from the University of East Anglia.