Category Archives: Timeline

1500-Present

St. Thomas More (16th C.)

St. Thomas More was an eminent Roman Catholic English Bishop who, in 1516 wrote one of the most important books ever published: Utopia. In the book, a traveller meets with several men and proceeds to opine and then to tell them of his peregrinations in foreign lands. He begins with a discourse on why the death penalty ought to be abandoned, suggesting that the only reason that most people are driven to crime is that they have no other choice. He continues that it would be immoral to punish someone for a crime which you forced him to commit.

After a brief intermission, the man continues by discussing the distant and seemingly perfect land Utopia. Utopia is a completely egalitarian society in which everyone works as much as possible and then freely takes of the abundance of the communal labour. Included in the system are universal equality, democratic elections, freedom from avarice and greed, a universal medical system, and universal care for those with disabilities. The wanderer notes that the Utopians are

extremely fond of people who are mentally deficient and, though it’s considered very bad form toinsult them, it’s quite in order to find their silly behaviour amusing. In fact, it’s thought better for them that you should, for, if you haven’t enough sense of humour to see anything funny about the things they say and do, you’re obviously not the right person to look after them.

…But if you start laughing at anyone who’s ugly or deformed everyone will start laughing at you. You’ll have made an awful fool of yourself by implying that people are to blame for things they can’t help -for, although one is thought very lazy if one doesn’t try to preserve one’s natural beauty, the Utopians strongly disapprove of make-up. (More, 1965; 105).

The word “deficient” is footnoted by translator Paul Turner (1965), and it is commented that the term could also be translated as fool, but that he chose this other term because More is clearly referring to those who are of sub-normal intelligence and therefore require some sort of support. It should also be mentioned that Utopia was the clear inspiration for later socialists, and it bears notable resemblances to The Communist Manifesto.

Paradigm PlacementPity, kindness, charity.

It is clear from the passage above that the blessed St. Thomas More considered that those with severe mental impairment need to be well treated and supported. While the language may be somewhat antiquated, the sentiment is what is key here. The Saint is exhorting his readers to care for those with disabilities, rather than merely considering them outcasts. Indeed, the above segment of text even makes apparent that he knew that not all people were well suited to helping those with cognitive deficiencies.

Furthermore, he continues his discourse by demonstrating that those with physical deformities ought not to be ridiculed because they can hardly help how they appear. As a result, it is clear that this prominent bishop in the high medieval period was actively engaged in advocation for those who were suffering from mental and physical disabilities.

St. Thomas More. (1965). Utopia (Paul Turner, Trans.). Great Britain, UK: Penguin Classics.

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Frankenstein (1816)

“Endless rain and creative imaginations on an 1816 vacation of friends Shelley, Byron, Clairmont and Polidori precipitated the modern horror story.” (Friedman & al., 2014; 447). This was where a young Mary Shelley composed and wrote her famous book Frankenstein. The book -which only superficially resembles its various later media reincarnations- tells the story of an energetic and devoted scientist named Victor Frankenstein. As a young man, Frankenstein is educated in a university where he excels in the sciences. He then dedicates himself to prolonging and even creating life. After years of fevered work he manages to create The Monster, which is never given any other monocer.

The result of his scientific experiment was a Creature from alien body parts, a hideous eight-foot-tall Monster, whom he rejected because of its grotesque appearance. In seeing his Monster, Victor [Frankenstein] asked himself in horror, “What have I created?”  (Carter, 1999: 1200).

Horrified by what the has done, Frankenstein rejects the beast and must be nursed back to health by friends and family. Guilt-ridden and slowly descending into madness Frankenstein grapples with the horror of his creation. By the completion of the book, he is completely insane (if he was not already at the time when he actually created the monster).

The impact of this work has been immense. Carter (1999) describes the book as “the most famous horror story of all time, is a major literary achievement” (1200). It is well beyond the pale of this study (and indeed of this author) to discuss the full range of influence exerted by Shelley’s work on other literature and cinema, however, a very brief overview of a few of the major pieces of popular media which were spawned directly from Frankenstein. There have been numerous film adaptations of the classic horror film as attested by the wikipedia page which lists dozens of films which revolve around the monster. Notably, not all of them are horror films, Mel Brooks’ Young Frankenstein is a comedy, and in his newspaper cartoon The Far Side, Gary Larson makes abundant use of the monster. As a result, Frankenstein is not only relevant as an early nineteenth century piece of media, but also as a contemporary one, whose popularity and influence have spanned almost two centuries.

Paradigm PlacementDangerousness, evil.

As noted above (Friedman & al., 2014; Carter, 1999), Shelley’s work was essential to the formation of the entire genre of horror and its influence has been realised well beyond the realm of that genre. Shelley, perhaps unwittingly, created a paradigm for later terror-based literature and film: that of the madman or mad scientist who unleashes great evil upon the world. In this way, mental illness, in this case insanity or obsessive behaviour, is associated with dangerousness and evil. The derangement of Dr. Frankenstein drives him to create the monster, which in turn is a hideous creation abhorred by all and forces him further into his madness.

Mary Shelley envisioned that maniacal pursuit of knowledge, fame, and power may not only destroy the emotional state of the scientist but also result in disastrous societal consequences (Carter, 1999: 1200).

The tale of the obsessive and increasingly disconnected individual who unleashes evil upon the world is a common motif. Shelley clearly employs images of insanity and mental instability to create horror. Much as Edgar Allan Poe would do several decades later, Shelley induces fear through examples of melancholia mixed with mania.

As a result, it is clear that the representation of disabled people in this work is highly negative. Those suffering from depression or melancholia are othered and considered dangerous.

Carter, Richard. (1999). Mary Shelley’s Nightmare (1797-1851): Frankenstein; Her Life, Literary Legacy, And Last Illness. Surgical History. 23(11). 1195-1201.

Friedman, Susan H., Forcen, Fernando E., Shand, John P. (2014). Horror Films And Psychiatry. Australasian Psychiatry. 22(5). 447-449.

Shelley, Mary, W.. (1977) Frankenstein. Intro. by Robert Dowse & D. J. Palmer. (Everyman’s Library: New York).

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A Christmas Carol (1843)

The popular Dickensian story A Christmas Carol tells the story of a miserly old man, Ebenezer Scrooge, who runs a successful business in nineteenth century London. Working for Scrooge is Bob Cratchit, who has a crippled son named Tiny Tim who desperately requires medication and treatment which the pauper and his family cannot afford.

On Christmas Eve Scrooge is visited by four ghosts: that of his deceased and draconian business partner, Jacob Marley, a premonition of things to follow, and the the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Future. Each ghost reveals to Scrooge visions which strike fear into the old man and make him realise the error of his way. The next morning he is a new man, generous and caring, and easily affords the medication which Tiny Tim needs to stay alive.

This story has gained renown and recognition all over the world for its excellence and beauty. It has been made into numerous films, which span a number of genres, and has been referenced in dozens of popular culture settings. For a century and a half Dickens’ work has remained popular and an intrinsic part of Western popular consciousness.

Paradigm PlacementVictimhood.

The depiction of the only important disabled person in this story is one of victimhood. While Dickens paints an accurate image of the hopelessness of those with too many dependants in industrial London, this necessarily involves depicting those with physical disabilities as victims of the cruel vicissitudes around them. The very survival of Tiny Tim is dependant upon Scrooge’s munificence. What the old miser decides to do with his money will determine whether or not the boy lives, and both he and his family have little say in the matter.

Dickens, Charles. (2010). A Christmas Carol. USA: Prestwick House Inc.

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The Tell-Tale Heart (1843)

The Tell-Tale Heart, has been one of the most popular and long lasting of Edgar Allan Poe’s works. The story tells of a young servant boy who is driven mad by the look of his master’s eyes. The story gives a window into his murderous lunacy, and then follows the painstakingly slow entrance of the servant into his master’s bedroom one night and then the killing of the master. Having committed this heinous act, the man dismembers the corpse and hides it under the floorboards.

In an attempt to feign his own innocence, he calls the police who unsuspectingly join him for a cup of tea. As they enjoy the tea, the narrator believes that he can hear the beating of his erstwhile master’s heart beneath the floor. The policemen cannot hear this fictitious beating and are surprised when the killer, who had up until this point appeared calm, suddenly shrieks his confession: “Villains!”…”dissemble no more! I admit the deed! –tear up the planks! here, here! –It is the beating of his hideous heart!” (Poe, 1956;199).

The popularity of this story is clearly evidenced by its prevalence online (as any internet search will demonstrate) as well as by the fact that The Simpsons featured an episode which paralleled the story. The Alan Parsons Project, a popular progressive rock band from the 1970s also composed a song entitled The Tell Tale Heart, on an album dedicated to the works of Edgar Allan Poe.

Paradigm PlacementNegative, evil, horror, dangerousness.

This image of mental ill health is very clear: those with mental illnesses are considered to be dangerous, murderous, violent, and paranoid. The narrator begins in a state of madness as evidenced by the fact that he cannot bear the sight of his master’s eyes. This aversion to the look of his employer causes him to take horrific action against the innocent old man. Furthermore, his mental illness magnifies his guilt and causes him to hallucinate, imagining that the heart beneath the floorboards is still beating. This hallucination in turn makes it impossible for him to contain his madness and he is driven to admit his guilt.

It is easily imaginable that if this were the only -or one of the only- experience that an audience member had had with mental illness, that this would make mental ill health the object of the horror that the story induces. As an early piece of the horror genre The Tell-Tale Heart fits perfectly with the habit of horror authors of employing mental disability to create fear. This is a technique which has been used continually for the past two centuries (Friedman & al., 2014).

Parsons, Alan; Woolfson, Eric. (1975). The Tell-tale Heart. On Tales Of Mystery And Imagination. Los Angeles :20th Century.

Poe, Edgar A. (1956). Selected Writings Of Edgar Allan Poe. (Edward H. Davidson, Ed.). Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin Company.

Scully, Mike. Kirkland, Mark. (Sept. 11th, 1994). Lisa’s Rival. In Mirkin, D. The Simpsons. United States: Fox News.

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The Raven (1845)

          The Raven is a very popular poem written by Edgar Allan Poe which chronicles the descent of a widower into madness. While sitting in his study one dark night, the man imagines he hears tapping and rapping, but cannot find the source. Eventually, throwing open the shutter, he gives entrance to a raven which lands above the door. Driven to great distress, the man believes that he can hear the raven saying the term nevermore, as though to mock his longing for his deceased wife. By the end of the poem the man is in a maniacal state while

    …the Raven, never flitting, still is sitting, still is sitting

On the pallid bust of Pallas just above my chamber door;

And his eyes have all the seeming of a demon’s that is dreaming

And the lamp-light o’er him streaming throws his shadow on the floor.

And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor

Shall be lifted-nevermore! (Poe, 1956: 39).

 

The poem was designed to tell a spooky and frightening story, and has enthralled audiences for the past two centuries by doing just that. Its popularity is witnessed most notably by the fact that The Simpsons included the entire poem in the first Halloween special that the series ever did (narrated by James Earl Jones), and, in 1975, the popular band The Alan Parsons Project wrote a single about the poem on an album which also featured the songs A Dream Within A Dream and The Tell-Tale Heart dedicated to Poe.

Paradigm PlacementNegative, frightening.

This poem and the pieces of popular culture to which it gave rise is important to the representation of disability in the media because it depicts insanity or schizophrenia as the object of fear. It is needless to say that no one wants to hallucinate, but the use of madness as the object of horror in so lugubrious a fashion clearly associates otherness and fear with the illness. It can be easily imagined that the fear of such an object of horror could easily prompt individuals not to report their own potential illnesses. This is an earlier example of how mental illness is used in modern Western media as a catalyst for trepidation. At the end of the poem, the reader is left feeling sorry for, but also afraid of, the narrator and it is therefore a decidedly negative and othering portrayal of mental illness.

Parsons, Alan; Woolfson, Eric. (1975). The Raven. On Tales Of Mystery And Imagination. Los Angeles :20th Century.

Poe, Edgar A. (1956). Selected Writings Of Edgar Allan Poe. (Edward H. Davidson, Ed.). Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin Company.

Swartzwelder, John; Kogen, Jay; Wolodarsky, Wallace; Simon, Sam; Poe, Edgar Allan. (Writers). Archer, Wes; Moore, Richard; Silverman, David. (Directors). (Oct. 25th, 1990). Treehouse Of Horror. Groening, Matt; Brooks, James L.; Simon, Sam. (Producers). The Simpsons. United States. Fox Broadcasting.

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Psycho (1960)

          Psycho (Hitchcock, 1970) was a film, released in 1970 which has had a pronounced effect on popular culture. The film tells the story of the owner of the nefarious Bates Motel, Norman Bates, who turns out to by a psychotic killer, meting out his neuroses on unsuspecting guests. The viewer witnesses this deranged lunatic speaking with his mother over and over again until, in the final scene the audience is permitted to see her and it is immediately apparent that she has been dead for many, many years. Among the most famous scenes is a shower murder scene in which Bates murders a guest.

References to the movie appear in satire as ranging as The Simpsons and the newspaper cartoon The Far Side (which features a number of strips relating to the film). Moreover, there have been many sequel films and spin-off television programs including a prequel show called Bates Motel, which explains Norman Bates’s childhood traumas and remains popular today.

Paradigm PlacementEvil, dangerousness.

The portrayal of mental illness in the Psycho films is anything but complimentary. Those with mental illness are considered to be dangerous and violent, and worthy to be feared. There is a clear association with mental disorders and violence: Norman Bates talks to his long erstwhile mother and commits heinous acts. It is clear that he is hallucinating and that this is at least part of what drives his violence.

One can easily imagine how a spectator who had little or no knowledge of mental illness would be negatively influenced by this film. The stereotype of the evil, deranged, and murderous lunatic obsessed with a dead relative is a strong image of revulsion in Western literature and cinema, and is perpetrated by the Psycho franchise at the expense of the social well being of those who suffer with mental disorders.

Hitchcock, Alfred (Producer), Hitchcock, Alfred (Director), (1960) Psycho. [Motion Picture]. United States: Paramount Pictures.

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Dune (1965; 1984; 2000)

In 1965, Frank Herbert published the first in what would become a series of popular science fiction books, entitled Dune. The book, set in a fantastical future told the story of a duke’s son, named Paul Atreides, whose father is given control of a small desert planet called Arrakis (or Dune) on which giant sand worms produce a product known as the spice. The spice is used by a monopolistic Spacing Guild which controls all interstellar transport. Meanwhile, the duke’s nemesis, the evil Baron Vladimir Harkonnen, in colludes with the emperor, springs a trap killing the duke, and sending Paul and his mother fleeing into the deserts of this remote and strange land.

Paradigm PlacementNegative, evil, dangerous.

What is important for our purposes is that the evil Baron Vladimir Harkonnen is summarily ugly and crippled. Grossly overweight he required a set of futuristic suspenders to help him maneuver. His ugliness and obesity is clearly indicative of his sloth, malevolence, duplicitousness, and general cantankerousness. Herbert (1990) describes him in the following way:

As he [the Baron] emerged from the shadows, his figure took dimension – grossly and immenselyfat. And with subtle bulges beneath folds of his dark robes to reveal that all his fat was sustained partly by portable suspensors harnessed to his flesh. He might weigh two hundred Standard kilos in actuality, but his feet would carry no more than fifty of them. “I am hungry,” the Baron rumble, and rubbed his protruding lips with a beringed hand. (Herbert, 1990; 21).

The importance of his physique to the evil of the Baron was not lost on the producers of both cinematic features. In both features he is pictured very much as Herbert described him. In this way, it is clear that, like the bards who told the Arthurian Romances, Herbert espoused disability with evil and dangerousness.

Galin, Mitchell; Rubenstein, Richard P., (Producers). Harrison, John (Director). (2000). Dune [Mini Series]. United States: Sci-Fi Channel.

Herbert, Frank. (1990). Dune. USA: Ace Books.

Laurentiis, Raffaella De, (Producer), Lynch, David (Director), (1984). Dune. [Motion Picture]. United States: Universal Pictures.

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Star Trek (TNG) (1989-1992)

“[N]o television series has consistently portrayed individuals with disabilities as major characters as [has] Star Trek.” (Shepherd, 2007: 2-3). The brainchild of Gene Roddenberry, the show was first aired in the late 1960s and early 1970s. It tells the story of a starship, the USS Enterprise, on a voyage of exploration. The original ship’s bridge officers include a wide range of people from various minority or otherwise marginalised groups including a female and African American communications officer Lt. Uhura, chief engineer ‘Scotty’, and both a Russian and Japanese officer (both the traditional enemies of the United States: the show’s primary audience). The program did include some discussion of disability and inclusion -indeed it has been renowned for its progressivism- however, it was not until the subsequent series, Star Trek The Next Generation (Star Trek TNG) that a disabled person would hold an important officerial role on the ship.

This character is one Geordi La Forge (who, incidentally, is also African American), the blind chief engineer and one of the primary eight protagonists. Geordi is able to ‘see’ using something called a VISOR (Visual Input Sensory Optical Reflector), which looks like a metal band which sits across his face obscuring his eyes. In several episodes, this ‘disability’ is discussed in detail. In one such episode Geordi is stranded with some of the crew’s enemies, an alien species ycleped the Romulans. The Romulans cannot understand why Geordi was allowed to survive on earth and, to the disgust of the viewer, suggest that this must explain why the human “race is weak. You waste time and resources on defective children” (Shepherd, 2007: 5; from Kemper, Pillar, & Carson, 1989).

However, the most notable instance of discussion of disability occurs in an episode entitled The Masterpiece Society (1992). In this episode, the crew of the Enterprise is attempting to save a group of colonists on a now unsafe planet. However, they soon discover that the inhabitants have a policy of killing all infants born with any disability. It is after this realisation that the following conversation takes place between Geordi La Forge and one of the colonists, Hannah.

La Forge: So…guess if I had been conceived on your world I wouldn’t be here now, would I?

Hannah: No.

La Forge: No. I’d have been terminated as a fertilized cell.

Hannah: It was the wish of our founders that no one have to suffer a life with disabilities.

La Forge: Who gave them the right to decide whether or not I should be here? Whether or not I might have something to contribute?

(Shepherd, 2007: 5; from, Belanoff, Pillar, & Kolbe, 1992).

These two episodes hotly support the rights of all people with disabilities to life. The authors, and presumably the audience as well, found it offensive that a child might be terminated simply because he did not live up to the physical or mental expectations of society.

Paradigm PlacementAgency, ability, positive.

It is clear from the above stated that the creators and patrons of Star Trek made and make a conscious effort to portray those with disabilities in a positive light. Geordi La Forge exercises agency over his own life, and holds a very high rank aboard the top ship in the Star Federation’s fleet. He is considered to be the cream of the crop and, in several other episodes, his ability only to see what the VISOR shows him becomes of great benefit to the rest of the crew, who are limited to their normal human vision.

Therefore, Star Trek TNG displays one of the most progressive and positive images of disabled persons. It does not shy away from the discrimination often faced by such people, but it also demonstrates that, with the proper support -in this case the VISOR-, someone with a disability can overcome obstacles and even rise to a role of great import.

Belanoff, A., Pillar, M. (Writers), & Kolbe, W. (1992). The masterpiece society [Television series episode]. In M. Piller & R. Berman (Executive Producers), Star trek: The next generation. California: Paramount Pictures.

Kemper, D., Pillar, M. (Writers), & Carson, D. (1989). The enemy [Television series episode]. In Roddenberry (Producer), Star trek: The next generation. California: Paramount Pictures.

Shepherd, Terry. (2007) Infinite Diversity In Infinite Combinations: Portraits Of Individuals With Disabilities In Star Trek. TEACHING Exceptional Children Plus. 3(6). Retrieved Jan. 20th, 2016. http://escholarship.bc.edu/education/tecplus/vol3/iss6/art1.

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Forrest Gump (1994)

Forrest Gump is a film which tells the story of a man who suffers from both mental and physical disabilities, and how he finds his way in the world. Raised in the southern United States, Gump is befriended by a neighbour girl Ginny who comes from a very abusive family. As Forrest ages, he develops a need for leg braces, which he eventually inexplicably sheds while running. As Ginny and Gump age, Ginny runs into trouble and ends up joining various political movements and attaching herself to abusive boyfriends. Gump, meanwhile has his own adventures which include running across the country, fighting in Vietnam, operating a shrimp company, and occasionally bumping into Ginny.

Eventually, the two end up forming a relationship -Gump’s lifelong dream- but, shortly after consummating the relationship, Ginny departs. Several years later she contacts Gump and he discovers that he has a son. The three form a family on Gump’s old farm, but soon thereafter Ginny dies as a result of her wild lifestyle as a youth, and Gump is left with his son. The movie is charming and witty, but is also tragic, and leaves the viewer with a bitter-sweet feeling.

Paradigm PlacementAgency.

          Forrest Gump presents a very positive image of persons living with disabilities. Early in the film Gump overcomes his physical limitations and goes on to become a celebrated runner. However, it requires the remainder of the film for him to learn to live successfully with his mental impairments.

Throughout the film, Gump demonstrates that people with disabilities have much to offer the world. Gump manages to contribute in many ways, fighting for his country, inadvertently creating t-shirt emblems, and touching many hearts. His innocence and charm coupled with the support of several characters and some good luck combine to make this possible. As Yang (2014) observes, Gump’s “characters of being frank, pure and optimistic have close relation with his own conditions and the influences of his mother and Jenny” (228). By the end of the film, Gump, now a father and successful businessman, has found his place in the world. He has exercised his agency, contributed much to the world, and has a son.

However, it should be noted that the film was not wholly uncriticised. Elaine Greenbaum (1996), while pleased to see a more positive representation of disability in the popular media, also expressed her distress at the fact that most persons living with mental disabilities do not have the opportunities afforded Gump. She argues that it presents the world of disabilities through rose-coloured glasses, and ignores the usually dead-end lives that people with lower than average intelligences lead. In short, she views the agency depicted in the film as being misleading.

This criticism may have some value to it, but, as Yang (2014) -and anyone who has watched the film- observes, Gump faces considerable discrimination, and yet he is nonetheless able to overcome this adversity, exercise his agency, and be a valuable and valued member of society. As a result, it is clear that Forrest Gump is one of the most positive representations of disability in modern media.

Finerman, Wendy, Starkey, Steve, Tisch, Steve (Producers), Zemeckis, Robert (Director), (1994) Forrest Gump. [Motion Picture]. United States: Paramount Pictures.

Greenbaum, Elaine. (1996) Forrest Gump And His Box Of Chocolates. Mental Retardation. 34(2). pg 128.

Yang, Rui. (2014). The Influences of Forrest Gump’s Characters on His Language Characteristics in Film Forrest Gump. Canadian Social Science. 10(5). 221-228.

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Filed under 1500 - Present, Timeline

1000-1500

St. Hildegard Von Bingen (12th C.)

In the mid-twelfth century Europe was engaged in economic growth which has continued to this day. The barbarians were now a distant memory, Islamic and Greek texts were being discovered in the Reconquista and were subsequently being translated into Latin for common usage, and the advances made over the previous five centuries (advances in fulling, windmills, wain construction, horseshoes, and so on) were bearing fruits, seen across Western Europe.

It was into this world that came one of the most influential women of the entire Medieval period: Hildegard Von Bingen (1095-1179). Living in the Holy Roman Empire,

She was grew up in a Benedictine community, contributing “as a theologian, natural philosopher, founder of a monastic community, medical practitioner, playwright, hagiographer, lyricist, and composer of vocal and instrumental music” (Berger 1999, 1). Much of Hildegard’s writing has survived to the present, including writings in which she discusses health and illness at length, from a holistic perspective. (Boivin & Phillips, 2007; 360).

However, the blessed saint herself was not free from the ailments which she sought to waylay in others. As her biography states

She did not lack, almost from her infancy, the frequent and almost continued pains of weakness -so much so that she would have to force her feet to walk. At times the life in her body flickered very low… (Various, 1998; 140).

Thus this prolific and influential abbess is both an example of someone with a severe illness and an example of someone who invested much of her life in healing others (Boivin & Phillips, 2007). The aforementioned hagiography, likely written not long after her death, describes at length how Hildegard and her various reliques cured many people of physical diseases, those who were oppressed by demons, and those with non-demonic mental disabilities, including two women healed from their “disturbance of mind” (various, 1998; 188).

In one instance, the saint received a letter from a fellow abbot enquiring as to how he might cure a mentally ill noblewoman (Boivin & Phillips, 2007). Hildegard recommended an exorcism, which was performed to no avail. As a result, the abbot sent the woman, Sigewiza by name, to her, where Hildegard arranged for round-the-clock care, including a specialised diet, psychotherapy, the constant attendance of one of the sisters, involvement in all prayers, and in the quotidian life and labour of the convent. This was followed by an exorcism just before Easter, and the woman’s complete recovery. Shortly thereafter, Hildegard herself fell ill, but also recovered after forty days.

While much of the diagnosis appears superficially to be fanciful – balancing humours, performing exorcisms, and so on – Hildegard’s approach, that is, an holistic approach wherein all aspects of life are addressed, had a very positive effect. Boivin and Phillips (2007) argue that Hildegard’s holistic therapy has much to offer modern practitioners of medicine.

Paradigm PlacementSympathy, charity, Agency.

Hildegard herself is an example of how a woman with debilitating health problems was able to rise to the pinnacle of Medieval society -sharing correspondences with Pope Eugene III as well as archbishops and other abbots and being canonised. Her amazing accomplishments challenge the spurious notion that medieval thinkers attributed illness to sin, and the saint herself does not appear to have allowed such an aetiology to influence her work with the disabled.

Hildegard’s success in life and her extensive work with those suffering from illnesses shows that important Church officials in the medieval period maintained a charitable attitude of care and sympathy towards those with mental and physical illnesses. Furthermore, both Hildegard’s high rank, and her desire to include her patient Sigewiza in the life of her convent demonstrates that those with mental disabilities were rehabilitated and given control over their own fates. Both Sigewiza and Hildegard, despite their impairments, were considered a part of the cenobitic community and could attain even elevated positions. Thus, it is clear that this popular saint, like the Blessed Margaret of Castello and St. Giles, shows that the Church at least, and likely popular lay traditions, accepted disabled persons, offered them the sympathy and support requisite for their success, and then allowed them to hold exalted positions of great influence and prestige, even celebrating their work with the disabled.

Boivin, Monique D., Phillips, Suzanne M. (2007) Medieval Holism: Hildegard Of Bingen On Mental Disorder. Philosophy, Psychiatry, And Psychology. 14(4). 359-368.

Various. (1998). Jutta And Hildegard: The Biographical Sources. (Anna Silvas, Ed. Trans.). European Union: Brepols.

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The Romance Of Tristan (12th C.)

          The Romance OF Tristan was an exceedingly popular medieval story, the earliest extant form of which -that which is here discussed and was written by a bard named Beroul- dates to the late eleventh century. The story is set within the framework of the Arthurian legends and is mentioned many times by Chretien de Troyes. Yet King Arthur and Sir Gawain, his nephew, make only a brief appearance.

The story tells of a Tristan, the nephew of the king, who, while retrieving the king’s fiancee, Yseut, -also spelt Isolde- from Ireland, inadvertently drinks a love potion with her. Thereafter, the two can barely keep from one another, and are forced to keep their illicit love a secret. Throughout the book the king discovers them several times and escapes, both daring and comical, are made.

There are two characters in the narrative who are disfigured and who play significant roles. The first is the dwarf, Frocin, whose dwarfishness, necromancy, and malignance are inseparable. “Cursed be the hunchback!” rages Beroul, and “Cursed be all such magicians! Whoever would have thought of such wickedness as this dwarf? May God curse him!” (Beroul, 1970; 61). Along with three of the king’s barons, the dwarf reports of Ysuet’s infidelity and, even though Tristan and the queen are behaving immorally, all four are labelled as evil and are both scapegoated and hated. For example, when the burghers of Kent discover that the dwarf has revealed the lovers’ trysting to the king, they decry Frocin stating:

“Dwarf, your magic has done this! If anyone finds the dwarf anywhere and does not pass his sword through his body, may he never see the face of god” Beroul, 1970; 66).

But the dwarf’s evil is not sated by this act alone. Later in the tail, he betrays the king by informing the courtiers that the king has horse’s ears. Upon realising the treachery, king Mark declares

“I’m resolved to make an end of him!” He drew his sword and cut off the dwarf’s head. Many people were glad of this, for they hated the dwarf Frocin because of what he had done to Tristan and the queen. (Beroul, 1970; 78).

In the eleventh century such a treachery was considered abhorrent, far more so than today, so the betrayal of the king by Frocin is all the worse.

Elsewhere in the story, it is told how the king, wrathful after discovering Ysuet’s adultery seeks to have his wife burnt. Before this happens, however, lepers from a nearby colony come to see what all the clamour is about. Upon arrival, their leader, Ivain, proposes an even more horrific fate for Ysuet.

‘I can tell you quickly what I have in mind [spoke Ivain]. Look here, I have a hundred companion. Give Ysuet to us and we will possess her in common. No woman ever had a worse end. Sire, there is such lust in us that no woman on earth could tolerate such intercourse with us for a single dayintercourse with us for a single day. The very clothes stick to our bodies. With you she used to be honoured and happily clad in blue and grey furs. She learned of good wines in your marble halls. If you give her to us lepers, when she sees our low hovels and our dishes and has to sleep with us -in place of fine meal,s sire, she will have the pieces of food and the crumbs that are left for us at the gates- then, by the Lord who dwells above, when she sees our court and all its discomforts she would rather be dead than alive. The snake Ysuet will know then that she has been wicked. She would rather have been burnt.’ (Beroul, 1970; 73-74).

Paradigm PlacementHatred, scapegoating, ostracism.

Beroul appears to have been something of an interesting character. He is in no way concerned with moralising and makes little to no attempt to justify Tristan and Yseut’s infidelity. He is decidedly non-religious, -invoking God’s name rarely, and His word even more exiguously- and seems more preoccupied with pleasing his audience than with imparting any form of ethic. Thus, using the dwarf to personify difference, danger, duplicitousness, and wizardry would have been very useful to him.

Unlike the stories of St. Francis, St. Giles, or the Blessed Margaret of Castello, the purpose of The Romance Of Tristan is purely to entertain and the motif of the evil misfit probably fits very well into this paradigm, as did the evil of Ivain the leper. Indeed, note the contrast between the moralising in the stories of St. Francis and his followers and the demonisation of the same group in Beroul’s romance. The lepers are not described as needing support or love, or having any ability to better their lives, but are rather decried as base and disgusting, dirty, and deserving of their low rank. They are to receive the chaff from society, and to be used as tools of punishment. Clearly, there was a multiplicity of viewpoint coexisting -likely not without tension- during the high middle ages.

This employment of disfigured and otherwise marginalised peoples to depict the worst of antagonists imaginable to the medieval mind tells the student of medieval studies several important things: (1), disabled people were often scapegoated, or at least depicted as being culpable for cases of witchcraft or sorcery, (2) that the use of ugliness or disfigurement to create feelings of revulsion was popular, (3), that those with debilitating illnesses such as leprosy were not pitied or succoured, but reviled, cast off, and hated, and (4) that leprosy could be used as a means of harming or castigating people who had committed wanton acts. Thus the depiction of disabled people in The Romance Of Tristan, as recorded by Beroul in the late eleventh century, is strictly negative and cruel.

Beroul. (1970). The Romance Of Tristan. (Alan S. Fedrick, Trans.). England, UK: Penguin Classics.

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Erec And Enide (12th C.)

The romance of Erec And Enide is unexceptional in many ways amongst medieval romances. Written by Chretien De Troyes, it tells the story of how a knight, Erec, wins a bride, Enide, and then tests her in rather cruel way. The tale includes a short segment in which a dwarf is included. The dwarf is described as evil and brutal, and assaults the queen’s maiden as well as Erec, who is unarmed at the time. Although this is done at the behest of the dwarf’s master, Yder, the dwarf is still depicted in a negative light.

Paradigm PlacementEvil, dangerousness.

While this reference is brief, the fact that a dwarf is used as the implement of such opprobrium as to attack an unarmed knight and a woman is exceedingly important to this discussion. The dwarf is described as low-born and ugly, and his actions are deplorable. The association of disfigurement, abnormality, and ugliness with such an offense means that this story depicts disabled persons as dangerous and evil.

Chretien De Troyes. (2004). Arthurian Romances. (William W. Kibler, Trans.). England, UK: Penguin Classics.

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Cliges (12th C.)

The romance entitled Cliges tells the tale of a man named Alexander who travels from Byzantium, where he is rightful heir, to Britain where he wins renown and returns with a wife, Soredamose, the niece of King Arthur. In the meantime, Alexander’s brother, Alis, has usurped the throne, but offered Alexander all of the power so long as he himself can retain the title. Alexander agrees on the condition that his son, Cliges, will be the heir to the throne and that Alis never marry. The two agree, but shortly after Alexander’s death, Alis decides to marry the Holy Roman Emperor’s daughter, Fenice. Cliges aids him in this, winning renown, but he and Fenice fall madly in love, so Cliges departs for Britain to win his own honour.

Upon her wedding night, Fenice tricks Alis into drinking a potion which will deceive him into believing that he has consummated the marriage, but in reality, he will simply dream it: as such, she is able to remain a maiden. When Cliges returns to Byzantium the two lovers elope through a complex plan, and eventually flee to Britain. However, after their escape, Alis’ “sorrow was so great that he lost his mind; he stopped eating and drinking and died insane” (Chretien, 2005; 205).

Paradigm PlacementEvil, dangerous.

This romance has only one very brief, but very indicative reference to disability or mental illness. Each character’s goodness or value is determined by his appearance and bravery, and Alis, who behaves most dishonourably is the only person who suffers from a mental issue and this is as a direct result of his own actions. He maligns his own family, breaks an oath by marrying, takes a bride who does not love him, and commits a host of other smaller infractions and acts of cowardice. Eventually, his malpractice catches up to him and he is driven mad by his inability to continue his sins.

In the case of Alis the emperor, there is a clear connexion between sin and madness. Unlike in most medieval literature (as observed in the introduction, Kroll & Bachrach, 1984), Chretien de Troyes, like Beroul, makes it clear that in secular literature the image of madness was used to express poetic justice. This portrayal of mental illness is, therefore, distinctly negative. It is associated with dangerous and criminal people and is considered to be a punishment for past sin.

Bachrach, Bernard, Carey, Kathleen, Kroll, Jeremy. (2002) A Reappraisal Of Medieval Mysticism And Hysteria. Mental Health, Religion, And Culture. 5(1). 83-98.

Chretien De Troyes. (2004). Arthurian Romances. (William W. Kibler, Trans.). England, UK: Penguin Classics.

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Hreidar The Fool (13th C.)

“There was a man called Thord, a small, good-looking man. he had a brother, Hreidar, who was ugly and so stupid he could scarcely take care of himself. Hreidar was an exceptionally fast runner, very strong and even tempered” (Anon., 1970: 94). The brothers lived in Iceland, and the story about them was written in the thirteenth century, as part of the Icelandic “Gold Age of saga writing” (Anon. 1970: 7). Likely entirely fictitious, Hreidar follows his brother to Norway where he embarks on a number of adventures and misadventures, serving the Norwegian king and eventually returning to Iceland and settling down with a family.

Throughout his peregrinations, Hreidar discovers his talents, but his innocence and slow-wittedness often causes him trouble. For example, when Hreidar presented some of his handiwork, a gilded pig, to a local king:

the king looked at the pig, and said, “You’re a really fine craftsman. I don’t think I’ve ever seen anything of this kind so cleverly made.”…[after it had been passed around], [t]he pig was was handed back to the king, and he picked it up to take a closer look at the workmanship. Then he realised that it was a sow with teats on it. He thought that this must have been done in order to insult him.” (Anon., 1970: 106).

As it turns out, this is not Hreidar’s intention, but was, rather, an innocent mistake. After orting out the problem and with the support of his brother and king Magnus of Norway, Hreidar is able to return to Iceland, marry, and find his place in the world.

Paradigm PlacementAgency.

The story of Hreidar’s life is strikingly similar to that of Forrest Gump: a  man with a mental impairment leaves home and finds his way to adventure and fame before returning home and having a family and normal life. In both cases, the disabled person is depicted as exercising his own agency and capacity. He is able to contribute to and be an important member of society, albeit, with the proper support, and he eventually finds his own corner of the world into which he fits perfectly.

Although Hreidar The Fool is unlikely to have been based on actual events, the story is nevertheless, indicative of Icelandic understandings and representations of disability in the early Christian period. Certainly there are marked Christian undertones to the story, such as the value of individual free choice -a hallmark of medieval Christendom- as opposed to the more fatal attitudes of more pagan stories (Anon. 1971 [intro]). However, much of the ethic remains non-Christian. Therefore, Hreidar’s story is an excellent window into how disabled persons were viewed by people who were beginning to have their lives truly renovated by their new Faith. Apparently, they felt that -at least in some cases- people with mental impairments were capable of becoming valuable members of society and of controlling their own futures.

Anonymous (1971). Hrafnkel’s Saga And Other Stories. (Herman Palsson, Trans.). Great Britain, UK: Penguin Classics.

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The Blessed [Little] Margaret Of Castello

Margaret of Castello was born in Italy in 1287. Her family was wealthy, but were horrified to discover that she was seriously deformed: she had a twisted spine, was a dwarf and was blind. At the age of six she was locked in a room, and when, after a pilgrimage to a Franciscan site failed to cure her, she was abandoned. She was adopted by some pitying locals and eventually entered the Dominican Order. While a nun, she engaged in daily prayer, in charity, and in the succouring of those in need around her. She died at the age of thirty-three, and was canonised in 1609. She is not yet officially a saint (Bonniwell, 1979).

Paradigm PlacementAgency, charity.

Margaret’s life is an excellent example of how people with disabilities were understood and represented in media during the medieval period. Despite the travails that she faced she returned munificence for hatred, and joy in spite of penury. The fact that she was canonised and became popular also indicates that people during this time period liked such an understanding of impairment, and believed that those with disabilities were capable of contribution, and even of attaining very high honour and renown. The story does not ignore the persecution and adversity faced by those with such obstacles, but it shows that, with the proper support, they could be overcome.

Thus, the popular moral story of Margaret of Castello, abovementioned, evidences the fact that people in the medieval era believed that those with disabilities possessed agency and could control their own fates, especially with regards to faith. It is also apparent from the story that the Church supported this perception.

For more information, see: http://littlemargaret.org/history.html

Bonniwell, William R.. (1979). The Life of Blessed Margaret of Castello. Charlotte NC.: Ideas Inc.

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The Little Flowers Of St. Francis Of Assisi (13th-14th C.)

          The Little Flowers Of St. Francis Of Assisi, is a text written likely in the early fourteenth or late thirteenth century. It is a hagiographical piece, which, while fanciful at times, does elucidate much about the type of moral leader that the late medieval Italian Church sought to promote. It was likely composed, or at the least transcribed, either from older literary tracts no longer extant or from oral traditions, by several important bishops -men of exceeding power and influence in both ecclesiastical and temporal spheres. The text, which appears in a number of larger books both in Latin and Italian, is comprised of fifty-two short chapters which tell of the exploits of the blessed St. Francis and his immediate followers: the moral implications of the text are banal.

The twenty-fifth chapter of the book tells the story of a hospital, founded and run by the earliest of Francis’ followers. It demonstrates most clearly an essential way in which the brothers minor interacted with disability, in this case, debilitating leprosy coupled with mental illness. As St. Francis

not only himself willingly served lepers, but furthermore, had commanded that the friars of his Order, wherever they went or sojourned throughout the world, should serve lepers from the love of Christ, who for our sake willed to be accounted leprous, it once came to pass that in a certain Place, near which St. Francis then dwelt, the friars served the lepers and the sick in a hospital. (Ugolino, 1998; 54).

The story proceeds to tell of how a man, suffering from very severe leprosy and being oppressed by demons came to the hospital (it should be known that the term ‘demon’ in this text seems to denote any negative, impious, or unchaste thought: it most likely denotes both the personification of such thoughts and the belief in possession by an actual agent of the devil). The man would rale against the monks and curse the name of Christ, and, after a time, the brothers could no longer endure such contumeliousness. However, before they were prepared to discharge the man, they besought the council of St. Francis.

Upon hearing of their intentions, St. Francis came and spoke with the man, offering to serve him personally, having been inspired by prayer. As he cleaned the man, the wounds healed and the man was made well, both of body and mind. Now solitudinous, he repented his former frustration, and died soon after. As his soul departed for heaven it found St. Francis and thanked him for the salvation that his munificence had wrought.

Similarly, in the forty-second chapter, another brother, Friar Bentivoglio of San Severino is called by a bishop to depart his home wherein he is caring for a leper. Not wishing to abandon his patient, he miraculously carries the poor man fifteen miles in a single day.

Paradigm PlacementCharity/concern, Agency.

There are several key points to these two stories which help moderns to better understand the ideal treatment of cripples and mentally ill people during the high middle ages. The first is simple: hospitals were built and often catered to those with horrific ailments. Not only is St. Francis said to have commissioned his Order to care for the disabled, but Biblical reference is employed to further extend this command to all Christians. Those seeking God’s pleasure and a good and pious life were to live as Christ lived (thereby making them Christians) and were to follow the example of St. Francis in serving the disabled, even at the risk of being exposed to debilitating contagions -the contagiousness of leprosy was well understood in the medieval period. So zealous was their concern for others that, even when insulted or called away from their work, they (ideally) did not leave their supplicants, but would, rather, continue to serve them. This shows a clear notion of responsibility toward and a genuine concern for those in need.

Secondarily, the fact that the leper himself, having been healed, is able to renounce his formerly rancorous behaviour and even to intentionally convert to a more sober and pious life, demonstrates the agency which it was believed people suffering from mental and physical illnesses could exercise. The leper, having been succoured by the friars, takes it upon himself to mend his ways and thereby takes control of his own destiny. Thus, the hospitals were seen not only as a place of physical healing, but also of social and spiritual recuperation and rehabilitation. Such rehabilitation clearly demonstrates that, as a popular part of the moral media matrix of the middle ages, both concern for impaired persons and a respect for their personal and moral agency were respected.

Ugolino di Monte Santa Maria (1998) The Little Flowers Of St. Francis Of Assisi. (W. Heywood, Trans.). New York, NY.: Random House Inc..

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500-1000

Paul Of Aegina (7th C.)

“As far back as the 7th century Paul of Aegina had discussed at some length the causes and treatment of ‘melancholia’ and ‘mania’.” (Crombie, 1959: 236).

Further research is pending.

Crombie, A. C.. (1959). Medieval And Early Modern Science. Volume I: Science In The Middle Ages: V-XIII Centuries. 2nd Ed. NY, NY: Doubleday Anchor Books.

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St. Bede The Venerable (7th-8th C.)

In the early eighth century, a cleric named Bede (The Venerable), wrote one of the most important pieces of literature of the medieval period: History Of The English Church And Her People. The title of the text explains exactly what Bede wrote. The monk’s opus is anecdotal and entertaining, and, like many other such texts, his writing often touches upon disability, elucidating the ways in which they were represented in medieval stories and literature.

The first instance features the father of a disabled boy “whose infirmity proclaimed his need louder than words” (Bede, 1968: 64), who approaches local bishops for help. “All were moved to pity by the spectacle, especially the bishops, who prayed God to have mercy” (Bede, 1968; 64).

In the third book of the History Bede tells a story about an abbess. When

a guest visited her abbey who was often horribly tormented by an evil [epilepsy?] spirit during the night hours. This man was hospitably welcomed, and had retired to bed after supper, when he was suddenly possessed by the devil” (Bede, : 159-160).

Finally, in the fifth book of his History, during a series of faith healing stories, the blessed Saint mentions that

In a village not far distant, lived a dumb [deaf] youth known to the bishop; for he had often visited him to receive alms and had never been able to utter a single word. (Bede, : 272).

Paradigm PlacementCharity, pity, help.

The first instance of representation of disability in Bede tells the modern reader that it was usual for those living with disability to seek the aid of the Church -a notion which is corroborated by a number of other sources presented on this website. It also displays the -perhaps idealised- reaction of the episcopacy to the needs of the indigent and disabled: the bishops were moved to compassion for the youth.

This is further supported by the second reference. Here, as in other documents reviewed, a monastery is used as a hospital, or at least a place in which those with mental and physical ailments could obtain support. In fact, it seems likely that the monastery was offering round-the-clock care, as the man was supported even after hours, when most would have been sleeping.

The final story is very similar to the first, in that it tells the modern reader little more than that the bishops were associated with helping those with disabilities. It is clear that the young many knew that the bishop would be able to help him survive.

All of this goes to show that, in the sources from which Bede wrote his History, and for those who read his works, disabled persons were understood to be deserving of alms and medical attention. While there is little evidence that the Saint believed them to exercise significant agency (beyond knowing the best sources of succour) there is a clear feeling that those with means should help those who face adversity.

Bede, The Venerable. (1968). A History Of The English Church And Her People. (Leo Sherley-Price, Rev. R. E. Latham, trans.). (Penguin Books: Great Britain).

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Einhard’s Life Of Charlemagne (9th C.)

When Charlemagne died in 814, having been king of the Franks for decades and emperor of the Holy Roman Empire (which was neither holy nor Roman) for just under fourteen years, he left behind a legacy which would grow over time until, by the eleventh century folklore hyperbolically stated that  “Two hundred years…have passed him by. In lands so many he’s conquered far and wide”  (Sayers, 1965; 72). In the wake of his death, several men undertook to write his biography. Employing many motifs, and often using their books to tell anecdotal or even unrelated stories, these biographers wrote much of what we know of the great emperor. One such chronicler was Einhard, a man of noble birth who was a monk -although not, it seems, a very strict one, as he seems to raise no objections about Charlemagne’s continual fornication and his numerous remarriages- and served for over twenty years at the imperial court in Aachen (Thorpe, 1969).

In his book, Einhard discusses a story also discussed by other chroniclers: that of the insurrection by Pepin the Hunchback, Charlemagne’s son by a concubine. Whether or not Pepin was truly a hunchback can be debate without end: it is possible that this depiction is merely a poetic motif popular in the ninth century, and thus may or may not be historical, either way, Einhard makes a clear contrast between this insurrectionist and his father. While Charlemagne was “…strong and well built. He was tall in stature, but not excessively so, for his height was just seven times the length of his own feet…” (Einhard, 1969; 76).

This description continues and “many details…are taken from what Suetonius said about Caesar, Augustus, Tiberius, Claudius and Nero!” (Thorpe, 1969; 185). In contrast, Einhard amplifies Pepin’s disability, stating that “He was tall enough, but had a hunchback” (Einhard, 1969; 73).

After the attempted deposition is discovered, Charlemagne has the conspirators killed for treason and sends Pepin to the monastery at Prum.

Paradigm PlacementDangerous, evil.

Here, Pepin is seen to be crippled and evil, and the two things seem to go hand-in-hand. Einhard, as a courtier, shows little sympathy for his position and certainly considers physical attributes to be paramount in understanding one’s highness or baseness in society. Through his descriptions of both Charlemagne and his son, it is clear that the emperor’s Roman good looks and Pepin’s disfigurement are intrinsic parts of how their actions were understood by his intended audience. It ought also be be mentioned that Pepin can be seen to lack agency on account of his failed attempt to seize the throne and his subsequent deportation, implying some level of victimhood.

A similar fixation on physique as relating to one’s character is evident in other popular secular medieval stories such as The Romance Of Tristan, by Beroul and  Erec And Enide and Cliges, by Chretien De Troyes. As a result, disability (and generalised otherness) was associated with evil and dangerousness, while handsomeness and comeliness were conflated with goodness, benevolence, chivalry, and military prowess.

Einhard, Notker The Stammerer. (1969). Einhard And Notker The Stammerer: Two Lives Of Charlemagne. (Lewis Thorpe, Trans.). England, UK: Penguin Classics.

Thorpe, Lewis. (1969). “Introduction”. In Einhard, Notker The Stammerer. (1969). Einhard And Notker The Stammerer: Two Lives Of Charlemagne. (Lewis Thorpe, Trans.). England, UK: Penguin Classics.

Sayers, Dorothy. (1965). The Song Of Roland. England: Penguin Classics.

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Notker The Stammerer (9th/10th C.)

Notker, like Einhard tells the story of Charlemagne’s insurrectionist son Pepin the hunchback. It is clear from the fact that both men used the narrative that by the end of the ninth century, this story had gained both currency and popularity. However, the tone of Notker’s writing is quite different from that of Einhard. While the latter is terse and to-the-point, Notker is rather anecdotal, and, having never known Charlemagne, he is less concerned with accuracy (this is evidenced by the almost comical nature of a number of the stuttering monk’s stories).

In Notker’s version of the tale, Pepin is exiled to Prum having been discovered by his father, just as Einhard states. However, Notker continues the story stating that, some years after he was tonsured, a group of emissaries was sent him from Charlemagne. The then King had discovered that a number of his most valiant followers were planning an insurrection against him and he sought his son’s advice. The messengers find him working in the garden with the old men and, having explained the situation, seek his council.

Pepin sighed deeply from the bottom of his heart, for all deformed people have a tendency to be more irritable than those who are properly proportioned (Notker, 1969; 155).

He then tells them to uproot any plants which are of no use. The messengers, bewildered, and fearing that this answer might put their master in further wroth, ask again. Receiving the same answer, they petition him yet again, and receive the same answer and all the cripple’s ire. Finally they leave, and, after some interrogation, tell Charlemagne what his son had told them. This leads the king to successfully expunge all the insurrectionists from amongst his men.

Paradigm PlacementDanger, sympathy, agency.

This narrative describes disabled persons as dangerous, offers them agency, and is somewhat sympathetic -a strange combination to say the least. On the one hand, as in Einhard’s story, Pepin is seen to be duplicitous and deceptive. He leads a failed insurrection against the subject of the hagiography and is therefore necessarily evil. Yet, he is redeemed by the fact that Charlemagne seeks advice of him, and by the fact that said advice is to the king’s distinct advantage. This shows not only Pepin’s evil, but also his value: he can undo some of the evil he has committed, thereby showing redemption and the concomitant agency. Finally, the abovementioned quotation shows clear sympathy. Notker appears to understand that, on account of his deformation, the man is irascible, and that this makes sense. In a strange way, the stuttering monk almost vindicates the attempted assassin of his own hero. Regardless, Notker’s comments about the short temperedness of disabled people shows a clear understanding of disability and a degree of sympathy for their plight.

As a result, Notker’s life of Charlemagne is something of an anomaly within the paradigm. Notker employs the image of a cripple to create a malevolent character, but he also clearly demonstrates some level of empathy for him and seeks to absolve him in some way of his grievances against the well-remembered king and emperor. This must, therefore, be seen as the exception which proves the rule.

Einhard, Notker The Stammerer. (1969). Einhard And Notker The Stammerer: Two Lives Of Charlemagne. (Lewis Thorpe, Trans.). England, UK: Penguin Classics.

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The Death Of Baldir (9th-11th C.)

The Old Norse told many myths about their gods. Some of these tales were moral stories, some were explanations of events both historical and natural, and some, such as The Death Of Balder, were tellings of unfortunate events, often with the underlying notion of demonstrating the failure of the law (Njal’s Saga and Hrafnkel’s Saga are both examples of this last type of literature).

The popular story of The Death Of Balder begins by explaining how all of the gods in Asgard were concerned because Balder, a son of Odin and Frigg, was perturbed by bad dreams. Fearing that this gentle god might come to harm Frigg travels the nine worlds and obtains an oath from every element and substance to the effect that it will not harm her son. As a result, the gods discover they can throw all manner of objects at Balder without doing him any damage. This becomes a great source of entertainment to all except for Hod, Balder’s blind brother who cannot partake on account of his disability, and Loki, whose malicious nature makes him resentful. The latter of these two manages to obtain from Frigg, while in disguise as an old crone, that the only thing which did not swear to spare Balder was a mistletoe plant.

Malevolent as always, Loki finds the spray of mistletoe, forms it into a spear and then meets the other gods at the mead hall Gladsheim, where they are throwing things at Balder. All except “blind Hod, Balder’s brother [who was] standing a little aside as usual – pathetic in his slow fumbling movements…He had long since accepted his fate.” (Crossley-Holland, 2011; 153). Loki approaches him and convinces him to join in the fun by throwing the spear at Balder. This Hod does and the spear kills Balder. There is an immediate realisation in the story that Loki is actually guilty, but that Hod must be punished because he unwittingly threw the dart.

Paradigm PlacementVictimhood, patheticness.

The portrayal of blind Hod is one of pure victimhood. He is described in the myth as an individual who lacks agency and ability. Never is his blindness seen as something which could yield positive results: it is an impairment which impedes his ability to partake in the heroic society in which he lives.

When Loki deceives him into throwing the shaft, Hod unknowingly dooms himself despite his innocent intention. Loki uses Hod to further his own pernicious ends and there is little that poor Hod can do about it. He is either excluded or used as a pawn: he has little agency of his own. Naturally, then, it is clear that, in the myths of the old north, disability was viewed as an unfortunate disposition, rendering the victim helpless.

Anonymous. (2011). The Penguin Book Of Norse Myths: Gods And Vikings. (Kevin Crossley-Holland, Trans.). Great Britain, UK: Penguin.

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0-500

Greco-Roman Infanticide

As the primitive Church developed in the first to fourth century it had a distinctive valuation of human life and this had a direct effect upon the treatment of children born with disabilities. As esteemed scholar Bruce Shelley (2008) notes:

Unlike his pagan neighbor the Christian refused to take his weak and unwanted children out in the woods and leave them to die or be picked up by robbers. If a Christian woman was married to a pagan and a girl baby was born, the father might say, “Throw her out,” but the mother would usually refuse (40).

A first century Christian moral text known as The Didache or The Teaching Of The Twelve Apostles (although it was not actually written by them) (Gonzalez, 2010), also takes time and precious writing materials to note that “you shall not murder a child by abortion nor kill that which is born” (Stinton, 2008). And as the famous second century Christian author Justin Martyr commented in his opus First Apology, Christians “have been taught that to expose newly born children is the part of wicked men, lest we should do anyone an injury and lest we should sin against God” (Leeson, 2008).

This is a landmark in properly understanding how people with disabilities were viewed in the world. Unlike in pagan Rome, the Church, when it came to power, had an approach which disallowed infanticide. This fundamental shift in the understanding of personhood and the rights inherent thereto will underscore everything that follows. Although representations of people with disabilities have not been perfect in either medieval or modern media, the belief that those who are infirm should not be killed as infants will remain constant.

Although this monumental shift in European understandings of personhood occurred well before the medieval period is typically considered to have begun, it is essential that it be discussed because the teachings of the early Church formed the cosmological, ontological, and theological framework upon which all later thinking would be based, even down to the present.

Leeson, David. (Oct 20th, 2008). The First Apology Of Justin Martyr. [audiobook]. Retrieved from https://librivox.org/the-first-apology-by-martyr/.

Shelley, Bruce L.. (2008) Church History In Place Language. (Nielson House: Dallas).

Shepherd, Terry. (2007) Infinite Diversity In Infinite Combinations: Portraits Of Individuals With Disabilities In Star Trek. TEACHING Exceptional Children Plus. 3(6). Retrieved Jan. 20th, 2016. http://escholarship.bc.edu/education/tecplus/vol3/iss6/art1.

Stinton, Sam. (May 30th, 2008). The Didache. [audiobook]. Retrieved from https://librivox.org/the-didache-from-the-roberts-donaldson-translation/.

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The First Hospitals

Peregrine Horden (2005), an important historian of hospitals and Western medicine has noted that the earliest hospitals known to have been constructed were built by the clergy of the early fourth century, coinciding with the legalisation and nationalisation of the Church. These early hospitals, Horden explains, were built by Churchmen such as Basil of Caesarea and St. Pachomius of the desert. Some were designed merely to succour the local cenobites, while others were open to the public.

As Perez et al. (2012) note, this idea of a hospital was borrowed into the Islamic world where they developed along a different trajectory than the institutions did in Europe. By the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, Perez et al. (2012) argue that mental institutions, first constructed in the Islamic world and then introduced to Christendom during the Reconquista, were being founded.

While this does not directly relate to the subject of how mental disability was portrayed in the pre-modern world, it is an essential piece of background information. These hospitals were likely primitive in nature, but they were, nonetheless, a space created specifically for the service of those in need of aid (Horden, 2005), and their existence shows that a belief was developing that the construction of such munificent institutions was an important moral obligation.

Horden, Peregrine. (2005) The Earliest Hospitals In Byzantium, Western Europe, and Islam. The Journal Of Interdisciplinary History. 35(3). 361-389    .

Perez, Jesus; Baldessarini, Ross, J., Undurraga, Juan.. (2012) Origins Of Psychiatric Hospitalization In Medieval Spain. Psychiatric Quarterly. 83(4). 419-430.

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Salvian the  Presbyter (of Marseilles) (5th C.)

As the Roman Empire imploded in the fifth century and the laments of Saints Jerome and Augustine of Hippo were heard across the known world, another Christian voice entered the fray, a voice opposed to the eschatological tone of the day. This voice was that of Salvian the Presbyter (400-490). In his monumental, yet often overlooked work, On The Governance Of God, the Presbyter decried the excesses of the rich, the tyranny they exerted over the poor, and the notion that the Romans and their subjects did not deserve the fall of the Roman Empire. As Olsen (1982) observes “Salvian very starkly drew the contrast between the piety of the apostolic age and the decadence of the present” (7).

Throughout his work, Salvian uses the term ‘madness’ to describe those -usually the rich- ruled by their lusts and avarice and thereby relates ‘madness’ to sins. However, about midway through his tome, he suddenly shows himself to be rather sympathetic toward those with mental illnesses. While discussing the sins of wealthy landlords, he states

Of all these [sins], madness is the least culpable, because the will does not intend crime where sin is committed in madness. But how much more blameworthy are those about whom I speak, because they acted as madmen, even though in their right minds (Salvian, 1947; 171).

Thus, Salvian, who is usually quick to associate sin and impiety with misfortune, shows himself to be rather sympathetic toward those with mental disabilities: because they cannot control their illness, they cannot be held accountable for their actions as others would be. However, he also uses this as a means of rebuking those who feign madness, because they are not possessed of such an alibi.

Paradigm PlacementSinful, victimhood.

Salvian, as a number of others, is difficult to place into a category with respect to his (tangential) discussion of mental illness. As an author, he had other more pressing concerns, but the above quoted piece of text does give the modern reader a window into what the low ranking fifth century clericature thought of mental illness. The allowance offered those suffering with mental ill health is similar to modern legal thought on the subject. Thus, it can be assumed that Salvian viewed those with disabilities as victims, unable to control their actions and therefore not to be held accountable for what they might do. As Kroll and Bachrach (1984) observe, many medieval authors seem to have noted a connexion between sin and illness only when it suited their ends, or when describing a political, social, or ideological opponent, and seeking to besmirch his or her name. Salvian appears to be no exception to this rule in his somewhat confusing association of madness and sin, yet his consideration of those with mental illness as victims who do not exercise agency even over their own actions.

Olsen, Glenn, W., (1982) Reform After The Pattern Of The Primitive Church In The Thought Of Salvian Of Marseilles. The Catholic Historical Review. 68(1). 1-12.

Salvian, of Marseilles (the Presbyter). (1947). The Writings Of Salvian The Presbyter. (Jeremiah Sullivan, Trans.). Washington, D.C.: Catholic University Press.

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St. Giles (6th/7th C.)

Little is actually known for sure of the life of St. Giles (known in Latin as Aegidius) (Watkins, 2002; Farmer, 2011). It is thought that he was a hermit who lived in the 6th or 7th century and, having been granted land by king Wamba, founded a monastery (Watkins, 2002; Farmer, 2011). He was allegedly wounded by that same king when he accidentally shot St. Giles mistakenly, aiming for a stag which had taken refuge with the hermit (Farmer, 2011). He is reported to have visited the pope and to have successfully prayed on behalf of Charlemagne (Farmer, 2011). Many legends circulated throughout the middle ages and St. Giles became exceedingly popular, having over 160 Churches named for him in England alone (Watkins, 2002; Farmer, 2011). He has been dubbed the patron of cripples, beggars, and blacksmiths, and is usually pictured with a crutch, a deer and an arrow in his side, all appertaining to the aforementioned story (Watkins, 2002). His feast day is September 1st (Watkins, 2002; Farmer, 2011).

Paradigm PlacementCharity/concern.

The importance of St. Giles to understanding medieval conceptions of disability is immense. Many may critique this assertion because of the hagiographical and uncertain nature of his Vita, however, that he was celebrated for such actions is far more telling of medieval ethics and the attitude of the Church and her people toward those with physical handicaps. The fact that the Church ordained an official patron for impaired persons, and that this physically handicapped saint bore such popularity, speaks to the prominence and potential for upward mobility of which disabled persons were possessed. It also alludes to the fact that there was a sense that cripples, like most other people, needed a protector, and this protector seems to have been very popular.

Various. (2002). The Book Of Saints: A Comprehensive Biographical Dictionary. 7th Ed. (Dom. Basil Watkins, Ed. [on behalf of “the Benedictine monks of St. Augustine Abbey. Ramsgate). Vizcaya, Spain: A & C Black Publishers.

Farmer, David. (2011). Oxford Dictionary Of Saints. 5th Ed. Online: http://www.oxfordreference.com.ezproxy.library.ubc.ca/view/10.1093/acref/9780199596607.001.0001/acref-9780199596607-e-729?rskey=3prlYC&result=1 Oxford University Press.

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