A Brief Look at the Evolution of Mental Health Treatment Centers: Tracking Mental Health Institutions over 100 yearsMain MenuBuildings and ArchitectureThe architecture of mental health institutionsStoryMap of 14 Mental Health Institutionsfourteen mental health centers on a mapFrom Madness to Mental Health: Etymology and LiteratureMental Health Treatment in Literaturebooks that describe mental health treatmentsJane Eyre by Charlotte BronteThe Woman in White by Wilkie CollinsLady Audley's Secret by Elizabeth BraddonFingersmith by Sarah WatersRosemary: The Hidden Kennedy DaughterWillowbrook Expose DocumentaryGeraldo Rivera conducts an expose on the Willowbrook State School for ChildrenThe Yellow Wallpapershort story by Charlotte Perkins GilmanConclusion: Voices in ConfinementJennifer Roseblade3bec2c34ce58b4d3d35176be40137c40b0518e32Jennifer Roseblade
Jane Eyre
1media/jane eyre book cover_thumb.jpg2021-04-20T06:38:16+00:00Jennifer Roseblade3bec2c34ce58b4d3d35176be40137c40b0518e321151novel by Charlotte Bronteplain2021-04-20T06:38:16+00:00Jennifer Roseblade3bec2c34ce58b4d3d35176be40137c40b0518e32
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1media/patton state hospital first 20 years.jpg2021-04-20T06:28:10+00:00Mental Health Treatment in Literature8books that describe mental health treatmentsplain2021-04-20T15:26:03+00:00Many forms of literature address the difficult subject of mental health. Victorian Sensation Fiction is a small genre of novels that highlight the issues of institutionalization in mental health treatment centers. Common features in such novels are large and secluded buildings, patients who are wrongfully committed, mistreatment by staff, and general misunderstanding and fear of mental health issues. Neo-Victorian Fiction is another genre that covers the same issues. Last, biographies are another genre that address non-fictional stories of people committed to mental health facilities.