Research Article

Swimming in the Deep Waters in Charlotte Jones’s Airswimming: Exploring Female Madness and Female Solidarity in a Psychiatric Hospital

Number: 62 December 30, 2024
EN TR

Swimming in the Deep Waters in Charlotte Jones’s Airswimming: Exploring Female Madness and Female Solidarity in a Psychiatric Hospital

Abstract

Throughout the centuries, madness has been the historical label applied to female resistance, female power and female liberation. It has been imposed on society by patriarchy as a phenomenon or an illness peculiar only to women. Its ultimate aim is to subjugate women to the patriarchal world order. Women, challenging patriarchal ideology in the way of their sexual choices and their lifestyles, have been labelled as insane and confined to the psychiatric hospitals in order to be silenced. In this way, psychiatric hospitals have become spaces that institutionalize women with mental illness. Patriarchy has taken advantage of these institutions as a tool to discourage women from acting freely and achieving personal development. In the twentieth century, when feminist movement come to life, many feminist playwrights specially tend to investigate and write on both mental illness and psychiatric hospitals as a means of male oppression used against women. Their essential motivation is to question the social and historical dynamics behind the labelling of women as insane and imprisoning them to the psychiatric hospitals. Award-winning playwright Charlotte Jones (1968-), one of the towering names of contemporary British theatre, focussed on caged two women in a psychiatric hospital, named St. Dymphna’s Hospital, in her first play Airswimming (1997). She puts these women subjected to imprisonment as victims of patriarchal hegemony and their deplorable living conditions in psychiatric hospital in the center and argues the power of female solidarity against patriarchal persecution. This paper aims at exposing the systemized male oppression of women by psychiatric hospitals and the power of female solidarity against this oppression by focussing on the image of the ‘madwoman’ in Jones’s Airswimming.

Keywords

References

  1. “A Victorian mental asylum”. (2018). Science Museum, https://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/objects-and-stories/medicine/victorian-mental-asylum
  2. “Airswimming, Swan Theatre”. (2024). The Fine Time Recorder, https://www.theftr.co.uk/airswimming-swan-theatre-yeovil/
  3. Akyürek, Ç. (2016). “İstanbul Jest Tiyatro’dan yeni oyun: Havada Yüzmek”. Ranini, http://www.ranini.tv/ozel/11277/1/istanbul-jest-tiyatrodan-yeni-oyun-havada-yuzmek
  4. Allen, H. (1986). “Psychiatry and the feminine”. In P. Miller & N. Rose (Eds.), The power of psychiatry, Cambridge: Polity.
  5. Aziz, A. & Goel, K. (2021). “The impact of patriarchy on mental health and physical well-being in India with Kashmir as a case study”. International Journal of Policy Sciences and Law, 2(1), 2911-2940.
  6. Barrett L. & Bliss-Moreau E. (2009). “She’s emotional. He's having a bad day: Attributional explanations for emotion stereotypes”. Emotion, 9(5), 649–658.
  7. Beake, J. (2021). “A story of female friendship in debut play at Westacre”. Lynn News, https://www.lynnnews.co.uk/whats-on/a-story-of-female-friendship-in-debut-play-9223863/
  8. Biber Vangölü, Y. (2021). “Terror, Spatiality, and the Future in Maria Irene Fornes’s Terra Incognita”. Latin American Theatre Review, 54(2), 51–70.

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

British and Irish Language, Literature and Culture

Journal Section

Research Article

Publication Date

December 30, 2024

Submission Date

August 23, 2024

Acceptance Date

November 15, 2024

Published in Issue

Year 2024 Number: 62

APA
Şentürk Tatar, G. (2024). Swimming in the Deep Waters in Charlotte Jones’s Airswimming: Exploring Female Madness and Female Solidarity in a Psychiatric Hospital. Süleyman Demirel Üniversitesi İnsan Ve Toplum Bilimleri Dergisi, 62, 161-180. https://doi.org/10.35237/suitder.1537895
AMA
1.Şentürk Tatar G. Swimming in the Deep Waters in Charlotte Jones’s Airswimming: Exploring Female Madness and Female Solidarity in a Psychiatric Hospital. SUITDER. 2024;(62):161-180. doi:10.35237/suitder.1537895
Chicago
Şentürk Tatar, Gamze. 2024. “Swimming in the Deep Waters in Charlotte Jones’s Airswimming: Exploring Female Madness and Female Solidarity in a Psychiatric Hospital”. Süleyman Demirel Üniversitesi İnsan Ve Toplum Bilimleri Dergisi, nos. 62: 161-80. https://doi.org/10.35237/suitder.1537895.
EndNote
Şentürk Tatar G (December 1, 2024) Swimming in the Deep Waters in Charlotte Jones’s Airswimming: Exploring Female Madness and Female Solidarity in a Psychiatric Hospital. Süleyman Demirel Üniversitesi İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Dergisi 62 161–180.
IEEE
[1]G. Şentürk Tatar, “Swimming in the Deep Waters in Charlotte Jones’s Airswimming: Exploring Female Madness and Female Solidarity in a Psychiatric Hospital”, SUITDER, no. 62, pp. 161–180, Dec. 2024, doi: 10.35237/suitder.1537895.
ISNAD
Şentürk Tatar, Gamze. “Swimming in the Deep Waters in Charlotte Jones’s Airswimming: Exploring Female Madness and Female Solidarity in a Psychiatric Hospital”. Süleyman Demirel Üniversitesi İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Dergisi. 62 (December 1, 2024): 161-180. https://doi.org/10.35237/suitder.1537895.
JAMA
1.Şentürk Tatar G. Swimming in the Deep Waters in Charlotte Jones’s Airswimming: Exploring Female Madness and Female Solidarity in a Psychiatric Hospital. SUITDER. 2024;:161–180.
MLA
Şentürk Tatar, Gamze. “Swimming in the Deep Waters in Charlotte Jones’s Airswimming: Exploring Female Madness and Female Solidarity in a Psychiatric Hospital”. Süleyman Demirel Üniversitesi İnsan Ve Toplum Bilimleri Dergisi, no. 62, Dec. 2024, pp. 161-80, doi:10.35237/suitder.1537895.
Vancouver
1.Gamze Şentürk Tatar. Swimming in the Deep Waters in Charlotte Jones’s Airswimming: Exploring Female Madness and Female Solidarity in a Psychiatric Hospital. SUITDER. 2024 Dec. 1;(62):161-80. doi:10.35237/suitder.1537895