Girl, Interrupted
- Genre: Memoir
- Originally Published: 1993
- Reading Level/Interest: Lexile level: 760L; grades 9-12; adult
- Structure/Length: 34 chapters; approx. 192 pages; approx. 3 hours on audio
- Central Concern: The author recounts her experiences as a teen in the 1960s while she was a psychiatric patient at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts. In this context, she examines society’s ambivalent definitions of mental health and illness, and the subjective nature of personality, behavior, and disorder.
- Potential Sensitivity Issues: Mental health concerns; self-harm; institutionalization; suicide
Susanna Kaysen, Author
- Bio: Born in 1948 in Cambridge, Massachusetts; after graduating from The Cambridge School at Weston, admitted herself to McLean Hospital at 18 upon her doctor’s urging; authored two well-received novels prior to this nonfiction work, her most popular
- Other Works: Asa, As I Knew Him (1987); Far Afield (1990); The Camera My Mother Gave Me (2001); Cambridge (2014)
CENTRAL THEMES connected and noted throughout this Teaching Unit:
- Perceptions of Mental Health
- Personality and Self-Image
- Gender and Sexism
STUDY OBJECTIVES: In accomplishing the components of this Unit, students will:
- Develop an understanding of the subjective nature of mental health diagnoses through close engagement with the author’s questioning of her own diagnosis as depicted throughout the memoir.
- Gain insight into the ways in which Perceptions of Mental Health and treatment in the US have changed over time through a comparison of the experiences described by the author with current treatment approaches.