Calaby's pademelon

'Madness stripped away the niceties': Tara Calaby imagines herself into a 19th-century asylum

Retrieved on: 
Monday, June 26, 2023

Tara Calaby, whose novel is based on research, draws on these voices and writes in between the gaps, or at the interstices, of historical evidence.

Key Points: 
  • Tara Calaby, whose novel is based on research, draws on these voices and writes in between the gaps, or at the interstices, of historical evidence.
  • Madness stripped away the niceties, that was all: the base drives of fear and hunger and wrath and lust were simply more visible here.
  • Madness stripped away the niceties, that was all: the base drives of fear and hunger and wrath and lust were simply more visible here.
  • Read more:
    Girl, Interrupted interrogates how women are 'mad' when they refuse to conform – 30 years on, this memoir is still important

Women’s secrets

    • Together they supply Melbourne’s professional middle class and elites with stationery: inks, paper, pens and ledgers.
    • The book opens with reference to the “noise and bustle of Elizabeth Street”.
    • While she possibly considers herself “plain” when judged alongside Melbourne’s society women and their fashionable dresses, Charlotte is a strong character with considerable presence.
    • Charlotte and Flora experience freedom by spending time together dressed as young men, camping in the bush east of Melbourne.
    • Read more:
      Trans people aren’t new, and neither is their oppression: a history of gender crossing in 19th-century Australia

Darkest moments and recovery

    • Charlotte is arrested by police, then hospitalised, where she is observed by doctors.
    • Charlotte becomes increasingly aware of the dynamics of the wards and the personalities of doctors and attendant nursing staff.
    • Calaby describes the asylum’s daily routine, such as menus, the gendered work regime for patients, and the hopeful intercession of visitors and advocates.
    • Some doctors were sympathetic figures who worked for the recovery of patients.
    • Read more:
      Hidden women of history: Catherine Hay Thomson, the Australian undercover journalist who went inside asylums and hospitals

Constraint and resistance

    • Her sinuses stung, her eyes watered; it felt like the tube must surely pass into her brain.
    • She tried to struggle, but the women held her tightly: she could move only her head.
    • Her sinuses stung, her eyes watered; it felt like the tube must surely pass into her brain.
    • And it’s a hopeful story about love and courage – which suggests alternative futures for women seeking independence from marriage and social norms.