“The Man Who Thought He Was Napoleon reveals the intricate connections between madness and politics by showing how every major historical event since the French Revolution has produced a special kind of delirium: from men who believed they had been beheaded by revolutionary judges to citizens who took themselves for the Emperor. This unforgettable journey will take the reader through the lives of men and women who lived through and came to embody the traumas of modern history. Murat has mastered the art of archival research: every page reveals a new find, a striking discovery culled from medical records and case histories that are presented here for the first time. A work of impressive erudition, The Man Who Thought He Was Napoleon also reads like a collection of page-turning detective tales.”
— Rubén Gallo, author of Freud’s Mexico: Into the Wilds of Psychoanalysis
“Beautifully crafted and passionately argued, The Man Who Thought He Was Napoleon opens startlingly original perspectives on madness and politics in modern French history. Since French asylum practices have been among the most discussed by philosophers, historians, and activists, Murat’s book is bound to redirect discussions for years to come. Readers will also be thankful for a superb translation that brings this prize-winning book to the attention of the Anglophone world.”
— Lynn Hunt, author of Inventing Human Rights and Measuring Time, Making History
“Murat is a subtle writer and stylist, able to assimilate a wealth of archival evidence into a forceful narrative. She gives new poignancy to the problem of distinguishing between what patients say and how their doctors represent their voices, and she makes her own process in the archives part of the story she is telling. Her imagination, her curiosity, and her intellectual independence enable her to glean a new understanding of the mark of history on madness—showing, along the way, the pitfalls in too easy an understanding of mental life.”
— Alice Kaplan, author of Dreaming in French
“Fascinating. . . . Murat’s analysis, informed by extensive archival research, shows how difficult it is to disentangle the intricate connections that link individual sensibility and imagination to the currents of history. Is our identity entirely shaped by our environment, or do we simply adjust our fears and dreams to external circumstances? And what exactly constitutes a ‘normal’ attitude towards one’s own times? Some of these questions are bound to remain open: this compelling book offers a valuable opportunity to consider them, and to explore some of the answers.”
— Times Higher Education
“Murat’s interesting political history of madness . . . is brought to the English-speaking world in Dusinberre's superb translation.”
— Choice
“Enthralling. . . . In following Esquirol’s claim through the turbulent history of 19th-century France, Murat is also tracking the institutional revolutions in French psychiatry and the constant redefinition of madness itself.”
— London Review of Books
“Impressive. . . . Further cements Laure Murat’s position as one of the preeminent historians of French psychiatry in her generation. . . . Brilliantly translated by Deke Dusinberre. . . . Murat’s stylish prose is transformed into elegant and idiomatic English with all the subtlety of the original French in this highly readable and thought-provoking study.”
— Nineteenth-Century French Studies
“[A] wonderful study, seamlessly translated. . . . It is hugely entertaining.”
— Fortean Times
“An engaging, beautifully written, and thought-provoking exploration of the intertwining of politics and madness in nineteenth-century France. . . . One of the many virtues of Murat’s book is that it is full of the unexpected. . . . She pushes her readers to embrace the multitude of readings and interpretations that her study allows, all the while revealing endless new facets of the ways in which politics, insanity, and psychiatry could inflect one another.”
— American Historical Review
“From a seemingly endless array of crumbling and decomposing damp-infested paper, Murat has brought to life a teeming galaxy of ‘tragedies, funny incidents, entire lives,’ summed up in a handful of words scribbled in the performance of a function. In the hands of a skilled historian, she shows how much we can learn, arguing that when read with suitable care and attention, ‘an archive reads just like its presumed antithesis, a novel.’”
— Times Literary Supplement