Anna is an interdisciplinary historian of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, with a focus on English psychiatric and cultural history. Her current research explores the lived experience of mentally ill women through material and visual culture, working at the intersections of the medical and health humanities and histories of psychiatry, space, the emotions and the senses.
Anna’s doctoral thesis examined cultural, social and institutional responses to female insanity between 1770 and 1833. It called for a reassessment of the dominant cultural archetypes linked to female insanity during this period archetypes, exemplifying the many ways that mentally ill women were conceptualised by eighteenth and nineteenth-century publics: including the mad shopper, the domesticated patient, the contented wanderer and the educated spinster. In doing so, it offered a new reading of the ‘feminisation of madness’ scholarly model.
As a postdoc, Anna has developed aspects of this research into her first monograph, The Gaze of the Sane: Asylum Tourism in England, 1770-1845. Drawing connections between historic and modern spectacles of suffering, this project sheds new light on the politics and practices of late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century asylum tourism. She has also developed her expertise in material culture methodologies, exploring the commercialisation of material objects that celebrated ‘Love’s Madness’ and co-editing a volume that explores the micro-history of personal and hidden spaces through three spatial areas: the body, clothing and furniture.
Anna’s British Academy-funded postdoctoral project offers a new feminist history of psychiatry. Titled 'Materialities of Care: Women, Material Culture and the English Private Madhouse, 1760-1840' , it explores the material, sensorial and emotional world of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century private madhouse, a space culturally and historically conceptualised as a site of deprivation, abuse and pain. Through its construction of a series of micro-histories on the material lives of privately incarcerated female patients, the project provides innovative material analysis of the private madhouse and its affective, sensorial, emotional or therapeutic bearings on patients. In doing so, it generates new methodologies through which to creatively and ethically analyse histories of psychiatry and women.
Anna has ongoing interests in dark tourism and freak studies, and the ways that histories of mental illness and health are told through museum displays. Her ongoing work seeks to address the methodological challenges that researchers working within this interdisciplinary field face, such as retrospective diagnosis, dealing with fragmentary source material and the use of speculative and imaginative methods in historical research.