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Delirium

Mindy Faber

1993 00:23:00 United StatesEnglishB&W and ColorMono4:3

Description

Defiantly humorous in its tone, Delirium reflects Faber’s mother’s personal experience with what has been classified as “female hysteria.”  While never reducing her mother’s condition to a single explanation, Delirium firmly and convincingly links her illness to the historically embattled position women hold in a patriarchal culture. The video layers haunting imagery and humorous iconoclasm, referencing everything from television episodes of I Love Lucy to Charcot’s 19th Century photos of female hysterics. Delirium contends that female mental illness must be understood within the political/social arena, and that in many instances women’s reactions of violence, anger, and depression are indeed sane reactions to abhorrent situations.

This title is also available on Mindy Faber Videoworks: Volume 1.

About Mindy Faber

Grounded in biting humor, a surreal sensibility, and engaging personal narrative, Mindy Faber's tapes are informed by political and feminist thought, exploring the construction of female identity as a result of social expectations and limitations. Blending personal stories with an investigation of broad social forces, Faber’s tapes chart the complexities of female psychology in mother/daughter and interpersonal relationships.