the confines the confines Continuing an exploration of social history and attitudes to mental health, Karen Apps was intrigued by the contrast of two women’s experiences. Both lived in confined circumstances - one by choice, the other incarcerated in a workhouse. She has interpreted these two very different experiences and placed them side by side in a small ‘cell’ like box. She states “Julian of Norwich and Lorina Bulwer lived more than four centuries apart but their lives bear some resemblance. Both woman experienced mental disturbance and while one was respected and highly regarded, the other was labelled a ‘lunatic’. Attitudes to mental health have shifted significantly but for Lorina Bulwer being committed to a workhouse in 1800's would have been unbearably hard and no doubt terrifying. By contrast Julian's visions were seen as mystical revelations and are what prompted her to become an Anchoress. This meant choosing a life of seclusion, and being walled up in a cell attached to the church. This can’t have been easy either but she would have been supported by her community and sustained by her faith. Her visions were regarded as divine revelations from God rather than madness, and her written accounts are still revered today. It is not clear what contributed to Lorena's mental distress as no diagnosis was recorded but support for those deemed to be mentally unstable was harsh in the nineteenth century. She used needle and thread as an outlet for her rage at the injustice she experienced and expressed this in a torrent of words stitched on scraps of fabric. Neither woman ever rejoined society” slaves to the needleslaves to the needle slaves to the needle
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