Girl, Interrupted Writer, director, and producer James Mangold took a sturdy leap when deciding to direct the film Girl, Interrupted, the true grade of Susanna Kaysen and her nearly two year stay in a moral institution during the late 1960s, based on her annals by the same name. Luckily actress Winona Ryder (who worked on the adaptation and fruit after reading the memoir), Mangold, and producer David Wick were able to amaze the idea that though Kaysen was diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), in that respect is some ambiguity in whether or not she genuinely is a borderline case. Given the decade that this occurs, the late 1960s, a season of extreme turbulence, and of the new adults questioning their roles in society, possibly Susanna (Ryder), unsloped graduated from high school with no exempt future in sight, found it easier to interrupt her own life, withal if it meant going a little crazy, than to grow up. What follows is an examination of BPD and how it is represent in Girl, Interrupted, as well as how it might be possible (as the ilm suggests) that Susanna was not necessarily suffering from BPD, but was just going through a turbulent point in her life, being pushed to the brink of insanity, yet not knowing what brought her there.
ace wouldnt think that it would be possible to be misdiagnosed as having a personality disorder, and be placed in a mental institution. However with all that the young adults of the late sixties were having to conk through: complete uncertainty, distrust in the government, no soak up future it was quite possible that the new science of psychological medicine would mistake an uncertain and suicidal (though not unusual for the time period) teenager for a Borderline who needs the help of a psychiatric institute. In Susannas case, her mother...
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