Brewing on Books: The Devil's Castle

Brewing on Books: The Devil's Castle

By Itinerant Literate Books

Author Susanne Paola Antonetta joins us to discuss her newest work about psychiatric history and the future of mental health care.

Date and time

Location

Commonhouse Aleworks

4831 O'Hear Avenue North Charleston, SC 29405

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Highlights

  • 1 hour 30 minutes
  • In person

About this event

Arts • Literary Arts

Join us at Commonhouse for our community seminar series, Brewing on Books.

On November 10, we will welcome Susanna Paola Antonetta, author of The Devil's Castle. Susanna's newest study covers a fascinating and unfortunately relevant topic: the darkest periods of psychiatric eugenics practices and how they reverberate today. The book is a rallying cry for better mental health care and understanding, with a healthy dose of fascinating history thrown in.

Susanna will give a presentation of the book, so come eager to learn more! After the talk, there will be time for audience Q&A and a book signing.


About the Author
SUSANNE PAOLA ANTONETTA is the author of The Terrible Unlikelihood of Our Being Here and numerous other works of nonfiction, fiction, and poetry. Her accolades include a New York Times Notable Book, an American Book Award, a Library Journal Best Science book, and others. She writes for Psychology Today, The New York Times, Ms., The Huffington Post, The UK Independent, The Hill, Orion, and The New Republic and has been featured on CNN. She lives in Asheville, North Carolina.

About the Book

In The Devil’s Castle, Susanne Paola Antonetta weaves a haunting narrative that confronts the darkest chapters of psychiatric history while offering a bold vision for the future of mental health care. In 1939, the eugenics movement growing throughout the West did its worst in Nazi Germany. Through the Aktion T4 euthanasia program, five asylums and an abandoned jail were transformed into gas chambers. Tens of thousands of lives—predominantly adults with neuropsychiatric conditions—were extinguished in those structures, ultimately paving the way for the horrors of the Holocaust.

Interlacing her experiences of psychosis with the complex history of psychiatry, Antonetta sheds light on the intersections of madness and societal perceptions of mental difference. She brings to life the stories of Paul Schreber and Dorothea Buck, two historical figures who act as models for mind care and acceptance.

This gripping exploration traverses the spectrum of neurodiversity, from the devastating consequences of dehumanization to the transformative potential of understanding and acceptance. With The Devil’s Castle, Antonetta not only unearths the failures of our past, but also envisions a more compassionate, enlightened approach to consciousness and mental health care. This is a story of tragedy, resilience, and hope—a rallying cry for change that dares to challenge the limits of how we define.

Organized by

Itinerant Literate Books

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Free
Nov 10 · 7:00 PM EST