The included outlaw: A study of the seclusion in Amalie Skram’s Professor Hieronimus
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/18009Dato
2019-07-20Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Ramberg, Ingri LøkholmSammendrag
This article presents an analysis of Amalie Skram’s 1895 novel Professor Hieronimus, with
an emphasis on the seclusion aspect of this patient narrative. In the article, I give a close
reading of the novel where I make use of insights from theorists from different disciplines,
such as Shoshana Felman, Erving Goffman and Giorgio Agamben. The intent of the analysis, is to show how Skram manages to expose the rigid social categories that characterize
the total institution in which the novel’s protagonist, Else Kant, claims to be wrongfully
lodged. Through a critical assessment of the institutional hierarchy, both social and medical, Amalie Skram makes her novel well-suited for the type of interdisciplinary readings
that in the last couples of decades have expanded and become more accessible, thanks in
part to the emergence of the field of literature and medicine. This development grants us the
opportunity to revisit the works of the Scandinavian literary canon with a fresh theoretical
perspective, where fiction bears the potential to articulate aspects of the patient experience
that has yet to be encapsulated by theory. This article shows how this phenomenon includes
studies that are not limited to this interdisciplinary field alone, meaning that a complex patient narrative such as Skram’s Professor Hieronimus is accessible to a broader theoretical
material as well.
Beskrivelse
Forlag
Aarhus UniversitetsforlagSitering
Ramberg IL. The included outlaw: A study of the seclusion in Amalie Skram’s Professor Hieronimus . Tidsskrift for forskning i sygdom og samfund. 2019(31):73-88Metadata
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Copyright 2019 The Author(s)