Hysterical Water is a collection of fierce, funny,
feminist poems, prose poems, and essays with poems woven through
them, all connected by threads associated with female “hysteria”
and motherhood. Hannah Baker Saltmarsh troubles the historic
pseudodiagnostic term hysteria as both a constraining mode
used to contain and silence women and as a mode that oddly freed
women to behave outside the bounds of social norms.
The poems in this collection question the way maternal thinking,
sexuality, affect, and creativity have been dismissed as
hysterical. Saltmarsh reclaims the word hysteria by arguing
that women poets might, in art as in life, celebrate incongruous
emotional experiences. Drawing on and reshaping an intriguing array
of source materials, Saltmarsh borrows from the language of
uncontrollable emotion, excess, cure, remedy, and cult-like
obsession to give shape not only to the maternal body but also to a
hysterical textual one. She revisits selective silence and
selective speech in everyday crises of feelings, engages meaningful
“anticommunication” through odd gestures and symbols, and indulges
in nonsensical dream-speak, among other tactics, to carve a
feminist poetics of madness out of the masculinist discourse that
has located in the woman the hysteric.