Details
Examines the perceived madness of Mary Shelley, whose sensational personal life and loss of her children found release in her novel Frankenstein; Emily Dickinson, the 19th century American whose poems reached far beyond the confines of her reclusive life; the utopian feminist Charlotte Perkins Gilman, plagued by depression, whose story The Yellow Wallpaper highlighted the horrors of confinement for women termed ?mad'; and Virginia Woolf, the modernist genius whose own demons would eventually consume her.
Creatives/Company
Author:
Berri GeorgeWhat's On By Year ...