I'd say PEEPING TOM is the most comprehensive and empathetic of pysh films. Yes, the unwell person in question is a monster, but we get a diagnosis (scoptophilia) and, more importantly, we see how he was made into a monster by familial torture. And most disturbingly, one is urged to imagine what a fine, sweet person this would be were it not for the predations of his father. Of course, in HMO America, behaviorism has lost its value as a profit center, and so the film must not be Untrue. > HI Jamie and fellow Screen-L folk, > > Also from Rutgers is Otto Wahl's Media Madness: Public Images of mental > illness (1997) and just for context Sander Gilman's Seeing the Insane > about images in general and historical stuff. Gilman's got a funny > story about how all his pics in the book are on the back wall of the > psychiatrist's office in the film French Lieutenant's Woman that I > heard him tell at a conf. once, so that reminds me that the film is > worth checking out. > > Also, forwarding your query to the Disability Studies in the Humanities > Listserv and asking them to write you directly. > > Best, > > JC > > Johnson Cheu > http://people.english.ohio-state.edu/cheu.1 > The Ohio State University, Dept. of English > 421 Denney Hall, 164 W. 17th. Ave. > Columbus, OH 43210 > (614) 292-1730 (Office); (614) 292-6065 (Dept.); (614) 292-7816 (Fax) > **************** > Curriculum Consultant, Project LEND > http://www.osu.edu/units/osunc > Nisonger Center, 357 McCampbell Hall > The Ohio State University > 1581 Dodd Drive, Columbus, OH 43210 > (614) 247-6073 (Office); (614) 292-3727 (Fax) > > ---- > For past messages, visit the Screen-L Archives: > http://bama.ua.edu/archives/screen-l.html ---- For past messages, visit the Screen-L Archives: http://bama.ua.edu/archives/screen-l.html