The Folklore of Deinstitutionalization: Popular Film and the Death of the Asylum, 1973–1979

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The Folklore of Deinstitutionalization: Popular Film and the Death of the Asylum, 1973–1979
Abstract
The demise of America's state mental hospital system, or “deinstitutionalization,” has received much attention from sociologists and historians of medicine. Less understood is the manner in which the public experienced and came to terms with it. Using elements of folklore and horror studies, I will examine how popular films accommodated audiences to institutional decline and confirmed popular antistatist pessimism. The Exorcist (1973), One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975), Halloween (1978), and When a Stranger Calls (1979) helped weave a tapestry of distrust. By endorsing popular conceptions of institutional failure and presenting mythical narratives of individualist triumph, these films helped pave a path towards the conservative Reagan era to come.
Publication
Journal of American Studies
Date
April 22, 2019
Volume
54
Issue
5
Pages
1-26
Journal Abbr
J. Am. Stud.
Citation Key
rondinoneFolkloreDeinstitutionalizationPopular2019
Accessed
2/25/20, 4:29 PM
ISSN
0021-8758, 1469-5154
Short Title
The Folklore of Deinstitutionalization
Language
English
Library Catalog
Cambridge Core
Extra
1 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation
Rondinone, T. (2019). The Folklore of Deinstitutionalization: Popular Film and the Death of the Asylum, 1973–1979. Journal of American Studies, 54(5), 1–26. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021875819000094