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Imagining the lives of nineteenth-century women asylum patients, Nadine McInnis charts her descent into, and recovery from, depression.
In the afterword to Two Hemispheres, McInnis describes her first encounter with the remarkable photographs that illustrate this moving volume. Patients of the Surrey County Lunatic Asylum, these women’s names and stories are lost to history. McInnis imagines their experiences of mental illness as she explores her own journey through clinical depression, and finds in these haunting photographs solace and community.
“In the medical world, the body is often described metaphorically as a machine. Physician-poet William Carlos Williams invoked a similar metaphor when he noted that a poem is a machine made of words. What intrigues me about Nadine McInnis’s insightful collection of poems is how the mechanics of poetry serve to explore what can happen when we as human machines break down. Equally captivating in these evocative and sometimes disturbing poems is the historical impetus for their creation—Victorian medical photographs. Two Hemispheres truly acts as a causeway between past and present, health and illness, and the supposed vastly different worlds of arts and biomedicine.” — Dr. J.T.H. Connor, John Clinch Professor of Medical Humanities and History of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University, St. John’s, Newfoundland
“These poems testify to the triumph of the human will against adversity. This collection is an excellent resource, with other texts on chronic illness, especially in women patients/artists … evocative, piercing-to-the-heart (and soul) poems.”–Anne Burke, Prairie Journal
“The imagined stories are compelling and tragic … unsettling and often harsh, but never lurid or patronizing. There is beauty in madness; McInnis proves it here.”–Carrie Schmidt, ABQLA Bulletin
“Her poetic portraits of women photographed in a 19th-century insane asylum make us see the women not as examples of madness but as full human beings struggling to overcome illness. These are characters as strong and iconic as the handmaids in the Penelopiad.”–Colin Morton, Ottawa Poetry Blog
96 Pages
8.75in * 5.5in * 0.402in
0.24lb
July 03, 2007
CA
9781894078597
eng
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