The Times Australia
Fisher and Paykel Appliances
The Times World News

.

By naming 'Pennhurst', Stranger Things uses disability trauma for entertainment. Dark tourism and asylum tours do too

  • Written by Joanne Watson, Senior Lecturer in Disability and Inclusion, Deakin University
By naming 'Pennhurst', Stranger Things uses disability trauma for entertainment. Dark tourism and asylum tours do too

The Netflix sci-fi horror series Stranger Things[1] is vividly soaked in 1980s nostalgia, famously catapulting Kate Bush’s 1985 song Running up that Hill[2] to the top of the music charts in 2022.

In season four, series creators the Duffer Brothers introduce viewers to Pennhurst Mental Hospital[3] for the criminally insane (which was also mentioned in season one). Viewers follow teenage sleuths Robin and Nancy into Pennhurst, where they are granted permission to speak with Victor Creel[4], imprisoned because he is thought to have brutally murdered his family.

Although the Pennhurst Mental Hospital portrayed in Stranger things is fictitious, the location was inspired by the Eastern Pennsylvania State Institution for the Feeble-Minded and Epileptic[5]. Later named the Pennhurst State School and Hospital[6] and located in the woods of Chester County, Pennsylvania, it was founded in 1908 and shut down in 1987. More than 10,000 people with intellectual disability and mental illness lived at Pennhurst, many spending their entire lives within its walls.

The real Pennhurst has become a tourist attraction, like dozens of empty asylums around the world, including some in Australia. But as we seek out thrills, we shouldn’t forget these institutions held real people and their stories.

Read more: People with disability are more likely to be victims of crime – here's why[7]

Pennhurst, then freedom

Pennhurst was a place of segregation, power, abuse, neglect and torture[8], fuelled by society’s perception that people with intellectual disability were a dangerous threat to social order.

At the dawn of the 19th century’s eugenics movement[9], people with intellectual disability existed on the lowest rung of the human hierarchy. Ultimately, they were removed from the human gene pool through institutionalisation and sterilisation.

In 1987, in response to the disability rights movement’s loud call for de-institutionalisation and after groundbreaking litigation[10] brought by a resident and her family, the State of Pennsylvania closed Pennhurst’s doors. The courts agreed those in state care had a constitutional right to appropriate treatment and education. More than 1,000 Pennhurst residents began lives of worth and value in the community.

In 2010, the state of Pennsylvania sold the site. Today, Pennhurst exists as a “dark tourism[11]” destination. Pennhurst Asylum[12] entertains visitors with “jump scares” around a narrative of depraved criminality, that simultaneously erases and evokes the inhumane treatment of the people who called Pennhurst home.

Old building with flowers nearby
Pennhurst today. Wikimedia Commons[13]

Real people, real stories

To those who lived there and their supporters, Pennhurst is more than the horrors of its past and the commercialisation of its future.

For Dennis Downey and James Conroy, editors of Pennhurst and the Struggle for Disability Rights[14], Pennhurst represents “one of the great, if unrecognised, freedom struggles of the twentieth century”, fanning the flames of the global de-institutionalisation and independent living movements.

Following Pennhurst’s closure, most Western nations began closing institutions. This independent living movement was a precursor to the 2006 United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability[15].

Article 19[16] of the convention obliges signatory nations to ensure “the equal right of all persons with disabilities to live in the community, with choices equal to others”. And Article 12[17] asks signatory nations to recognise that all citizens, regardless of disability, have “legal personhood[18]” and therefore should enjoy autonomy and respect.

The convention charges signatory nations with an unequivocal obligation to firmly make the traumatic experiences of institutionalisation a thing of the past, while acknowledging and preserving the stories of trauma as narratives of dignity and respect.

Read more: Over 1,000 Australians with cognitive disability are detained indefinitely each year. This shameful practice needs to stop[19]

A global ghost tour

Pennhurst is one of many “haunted” tourist attractions worldwide inspired by traumatised lives of people with disability.

A hemisphere away, high on a hill, overlooking the rural town of Ararat in Western Victoria, Australia, stands Aradale Lunatic Asylum[20], location of the notorious J-Ward[21].

During its years of operation from 1867 to 1993, it was home to more than 10,000 people with disability. Like Pennhurst, the past two decades have seen a transformation of Aradale into a tourist attraction, exploiting the very real and horrific life experiences of the people who called it home.

Thrill-seekers can join the Aradale ghost tour[22] and be haunted by such ghostly “tickling, strange smells, banging sounds, shadows, and other spooky sensations”.

old stone building Ararat prison asylum. Wikimedia Commons/Denis Frolow, CC BY-SA[23][24]

Tours and “paranormal investigations” also operate[25] at the former Mayday Hills Lunatic Asylum, in Beechworth, Victoria. Tours of Sydney’s Gladesville Mental Hospital[26], formerly Tarban Creek Lunatic Asylum, are currently on hold due to COVID.

Shuttered institutions[27] that were once home to people with disabilities in the United States, Norway, Austria and South Korea are regularly grouped[28] into terrifying online itineraries.

Postcard showing Beechworth asylum The asylum at Beechworth, where tours run today. Wikimedia Commons[29]

Acknowledge and preserve their stories

Dark tourism operators sell thrilling customer experiences – but the stories of people with disability who lived behind the walls of institutions like Pennhurst and Aradale are much darker.

By relying on offensive and misguided portrayals of people with disability as horrifying, dangerous and criminal, operators exploit the ways residents were treated for commercialised entertainment.

Ironically, London’s Bethlem Hospital[30] (from which the word “bedlam” originated) reportedly ran tours[31] for curious visitors to gawk at residents until 1770. But today, the Bethlem Museum of the Mind[32] houses archives and art “to support the history of mental healthcare and treatment”. An upcoming exhibition[33] explores how “experiences of trauma, mental distress, contact with mental health services and everyday life can shape and disrupt a person’s sense of home”.

Netflix and filmmakers like the Duffer Brothers have an opportunity to acknowledge and preserve the stories of institutionalised communal trauma. A simple dedication to Pennhurst residents could even be added to a Stranger Things episode or opening credits. It could educate a generation of world citizens about the crimes of the past and the intrinsic personhood of all of humanity.

Read more: Jimmy Savile: how the Netflix documentary fails to address the role institutions play in abuse[34]

References

  1. ^ Stranger Things (www.imdb.com)
  2. ^ Running up that Hill (www.theguardian.com)
  3. ^ Pennhurst Mental Hospital (strangerthings.fandom.com)
  4. ^ Victor Creel (www.netflix.com)
  5. ^ Eastern Pennsylvania State Institution for the Feeble-Minded and Epileptic (www.preservepennhurst.org)
  6. ^ Pennhurst State School and Hospital (philadelphiaencyclopedia.org)
  7. ^ People with disability are more likely to be victims of crime – here's why (theconversation.com)
  8. ^ segregation, power, abuse, neglect and torture (www.preservepennhurst.org)
  9. ^ eugenics movement (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
  10. ^ groundbreaking litigation (www.preservepennhurst.org)
  11. ^ dark tourism (www.goodreads.com)
  12. ^ Pennhurst Asylum (pennhurstasylum.com)
  13. ^ Wikimedia Commons (upload.wikimedia.org)
  14. ^ Pennhurst and the Struggle for Disability Rights (www.psupress.org)
  15. ^ United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability (www.un.org)
  16. ^ Article 19 (www.un.org)
  17. ^ Article 12 (www.un.org)
  18. ^ legal personhood (www.tandfonline.com)
  19. ^ Over 1,000 Australians with cognitive disability are detained indefinitely each year. This shameful practice needs to stop (theconversation.com)
  20. ^ Aradale Lunatic Asylum (www.aradale.com.au)
  21. ^ J-Ward (www.jward.org.au)
  22. ^ Aradale ghost tour (www.eerietours.com.au)
  23. ^ Wikimedia Commons/Denis Frolow (commons.wikimedia.org)
  24. ^ CC BY-SA (creativecommons.org)
  25. ^ operate (www.explorebeechworth.com.au)
  26. ^ Gladesville Mental Hospital (www.sydneyhistorytour.com)
  27. ^ Shuttered institutions (www.thrillist.com)
  28. ^ grouped (www.nationalgeographic.com)
  29. ^ Wikimedia Commons (upload.wikimedia.org)
  30. ^ Bethlem Hospital (www.bbc.com)
  31. ^ reportedly ran tours (www.mirror.co.uk)
  32. ^ Bethlem Museum of the Mind (museumofthemind.org.uk)
  33. ^ upcoming exhibition (museumofthemind.org.uk)
  34. ^ Jimmy Savile: how the Netflix documentary fails to address the role institutions play in abuse (theconversation.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/by-naming-pennhurst-stranger-things-uses-disability-trauma-for-entertainment-dark-tourism-and-asylum-tours-do-too-185581

Active Wear

Times Magazine

Myer celebrates 70 years of Christmas windows magic with the LEGO Group

To mark the 70th anniversary of the Myer Christmas Windows, Australia’s favourite department store...

Kindness Tops the List: New Survey Reveals Australia’s Defining Value

Commentary from Kath Koschel, founder of Kindness Factory.  In a time where headlines are dominat...

In 2024, the climate crisis worsened in all ways. But we can still limit warming with bold action

Climate change has been on the world’s radar for decades[1]. Predictions made by scientists at...

End-of-Life Planning: Why Talking About Death With Family Makes Funeral Planning Easier

I spend a lot of time talking about death. Not in a morbid, gloomy way—but in the same way we d...

YepAI Joins Victoria's AI Trade Mission to Singapore for Big Data & AI World Asia 2025

YepAI, a Melbourne-based leader in enterprise artificial intelligence solutions, announced today...

Building a Strong Online Presence with Katoomba Web Design

Katoomba web design is more than just creating a website that looks good—it’s about building an onli...

The Times Features

Myer celebrates 70 years of Christmas windows magic with the LEGO Group

To mark the 70th anniversary of the Myer Christmas Windows, Australia’s favourite department store...

Pharmac wants to trim its controversial medicines waiting list – no list at all might be better

New Zealand’s drug-buying agency Pharmac is currently consulting[1] on a change to how it mana...

NRMA Partnership Unlocks Cinema and Hotel Discounts

My NRMA Rewards, one of Australia’s largest membership and benefits programs, has announced a ne...

Restaurants to visit in St Kilda and South Yarra

Here are six highly-recommended restaurants split between the seaside suburb of St Kilda and the...

The Year of Actually Doing It

There’s something about the week between Christmas and New Year’s that makes us all pause and re...

Jetstar to start flying Sunshine Coast to Singapore Via Bali With Prices Starting At $199

The Sunshine Coast is set to make history, with Jetstar today announcing the launch of direct fl...

Why Melbourne Families Are Choosing Custom Home Builders Over Volume Builders

Across Melbourne’s growing suburbs, families are re-evaluating how they build their dream homes...

Australian Startup Business Operators Should Make Connections with Asian Enterprises — That Is Where Their Future Lies

In the rapidly shifting global economy, Australian startups are increasingly finding that their ...

How early is too early’ for Hot Cross Buns to hit supermarket and bakery shelves

Every year, Australians find themselves in the middle of the nation’s most delicious dilemmas - ...