Dr. Simon Schleusener (Julius-Maximilians-Universit?t Würzburg): "The Cinema of Insanity: Madness and Normality in the Culture of the 1960s"

Wednesday, 25.01.2017, 12:15 - 1:45 p.m., U5/01.18

This talk concentrated on the cultural negotiations surrounding the question of madness and normality in the early 1960s. Focusing primarily on Hollywood's cinematographic depiction of the subject, special attention was given to four films in particular: Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960), Elia Kazan's Splendor in the Grass (1961), John Cassavetes' A Child Is Waiting (1963), and Samuel Fuller's Shock Corridor (1963). Despite their differences, what all these films demonstrate is that the common understanding of normality - and the boundary between the normal and the abnormal - tended to become more flexible in the early Sixties. In the course of his presentation, Dr. Schleusener analyzed this development against the backdrop of two simultaneously emerging phenomena: countercultural thought and neoliberal discourse.

Simon Schleusener is a research associate at the University of Würzburg's American Studies Department. In 2012, he obtained his PhD at the John F. Kennedy Institute (Freie Universit?t Berlin) with a thesis on the topic "Kulturelle Komplexit?t: Gilles Deleuze und die Kulturtheorie der American Studies." He has published texts on American literature, cultural theory, and the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze. Currently, he is pursuing a postdoctoral project on the cultural and affective dimensions of the new capitalism.