Friday, January 29, 2010

Research--one of the funnest parts of writing


In my new book my heroine is reading her great-grandmother's diaries, and I'd like to incorporate some of them into the book. So I needed to find some writing by women at the turn of the century, to capture a bit of the tone. I was having trouble finding good online sources, so wasn't I pleased when this book turned up in the bargain section of my store! 700 pages of historical women's letters.

I've been reading them over breakfast each morning, and they're so interesting.

Crazy Like Us by Ethan Watters - looks interessant

The author of this book was interviewed on The Daily Show this week, and the book looks vair vair interessant. He proposes that mental illness are often specific to a culture, or a period of history.

Reminds me of Fanon, who stopped practicing psychiatry in Algeria because he decided he was just treating the symptoms, when it was the disease that needed to be faced--that disease being colonialism. People were going crazy for a good reason, and he didn't want to just help them get better at tolerating it.

The book is timely since the psychs will soon be on their way to Haiti to *help.* Here's an excerpt from the book:

There is now a remarkable body of research that suggests that mental illnesses are not, as sometimes assumed, spread evenly around the globe. They have appeared in different cultures in endlessly complex and unique forms. Indonesian men have been known to experience amok, in which a minor social insult launches an extended period of brooding punctuated by an episode of murderous rage. Southeastern Asian males sometimes suffer from koro, the debilitating certainty that their genitals are retracting into their body. Across the fertile crescent of the Middle East there is zar, a mental illness related to spirit possession that brings forth dissociative episodes of crying, laughing, shouting, and singing.

The diversity that can be found across cultures can be seen across time as well. Because the troubled mind has been perceived in terms of diverse religious, scientific, and social beliefs of discrete cultures, the forms of madness from one place and time in history often look remarkably different from the forms of madness in another. These differing forms of mental illness can sometimes appear and disappear within a generation. In his book Mad Travelers Ian Hacking documents the fleeting appearance in Victorian Europe of a fugue state in which young men would walk in a trance for hundreds of miles. Symptoms of mental illnesses are the lightning in the zeitgeist, the product of culture and belief in specific times and specific places. That thousands of upper-class women in the mid-nineteenth century couldn't get out of bed due to the onset of hysterical leg paralysis gives us a visceral understanding of the restrictions set on women's social roles at the time.

But with the increasing speed of globalization, something has changed. The remarkable diversity once seen among different cultures' conceptions of madness is rapidly disappearing. A few mental illnesses identified and popularized in the United States — depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and anorexia among them — now appear to be spreading across cultural boundaries and around the world with the speed of contagious diseases. Indigenous forms of mental illness and healing are being bulldozed by disease categories and treatments made in the USA.

Charlie Simpson - cute!

CNN - London, England — He’s no Wyclef Jean or George Clooney, but that hasn’t stopped seven-year-old Charlie Simpson from raising more than £120,000 ($195,000) for the Haiti earthquake.

Simpson from Fulham, west London had hoped to raise just £500 for UNICEF’s earthquake appeal by cycling eight kilometers (five miles)around a local park.

“My name is Charlie Simpson. I want to do a sponsored bike ride for Haiti because there was a big earthquake and loads of people have lost their lives,” said Simpson on his JustGiving page, a fundraising site which launched his efforts.

“I want to make some money to buy food, water and tents for everyone in Haiti,” he said.

[Saw this posted on Wyclef's blog.]

From pants to blitz


Read Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants all day, so that I can start Blackout.

I kept this freebie of Pants for years now because Friend Maewitch enjoyed it and our tastes are similar enough. Here are my thoughts.

* It was unintentionally funny, because after reading so many Georgia stories, which are British and therefore "pants" means underwear, and the characters are ALWAYS making jokes about pants, it's now hard for me to take the title of this book seriously.

* Great characters.

* Sadder than I expected, which wasn't quite what I was in the mood for. But since I'm heading into Connie, who will most certainly throw some tragedy at me, I might as well get used to feeling melancholy.

Too many teen books have all this You Must Learn to Deal With Life ness to them. No wonder Gossip Girl books are so popular.

Onto Blackout. The thank-you page is already awesome, and hints at some of the great research she did:

"I want to thank the marvelous group of ladies at the Imperial War Museum the day I was there doing research--women who, it turned out, had all been rescue workers and ambulance drivers and air-raid wardens during the Blitz, and who told me story after story that proved invaluable to the book and to my understanding of the bravery, determination, and humor of the British people as they faced down Hitler. And I want to thank my wonderful husband, who found them, sat them down, bought them tea and cakes, and then came to find me so I could interview them. Best husband ever!"

Sounds like something Fernando would do.

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