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- Prairie_madness abstract "For the 1970s band, see Prairie Madness (band).Prairie madness or prairie fever was an affliction that affected western European settlers in the Great Plains during the migration to, and settlement of, the Canadian Prairies & the Western United States in the nineteenth century. Settlers moving from urbanized or relatively settled areas in the East faced the risk of mental breakdown caused by the harsh living conditions and the extreme levels of isolation on the prairie. Symptoms of prairie madness included depression, withdrawal, changes in character and habit, and violence. Prairie madness sometimes resulted in the afflicted person moving back East or, in extreme cases, suicide.Prairie madness is not a clinical condition; rather, it is a pervasive subject in writings of fiction and non-fiction from the period to describe a fairly common phenomenon. It was described by E.V. Smalley in 1893: \"an alarming amount of insanity occurs in the new Prairie States among farmers and their wives.\"".
- Prairie_madness thumbnail Grand_Forks,_ND_store_1880.jpg?width=300.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageID "1643324".
- Prairie_madness wikiPageLength "11471".
- Prairie_madness wikiPageOutDegree "28".
- Prairie_madness wikiPageRevisionID "706207405".
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Agoraphobia.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Cabin_fever.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Canadian_Prairies.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Category:Popular_psychology.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Daniel_J._Boorstin.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Depression_(mood).
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Frederick_Jackson_Turner.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Giants_in_the_Earth_(novel).
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Great_Plains.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Homestead_Acts.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink My_Ántonia.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink O_Pioneers!.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Ole_Edvart_Rølvaag.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Prairie_Fever.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Prairie_Madness_(band).
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Suicide.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink The_Americans:_The_Democratic_Experience.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink The_Homesman.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink The_Wind_(novel).
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Walter_Prescott_Webb.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink Willa_Cather.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink File:DSCN5051_greatplainswestofkearney_e.jpg.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink File:Grand_Forks,_ND_store_1880.jpg.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLink File:Great_Plains_Nebraska_USA1.jpg.
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLinkText "Prairie madness".
- Prairie_madness wikiPageWikiLinkText "unsparingly harsh and difficult".
- Prairie_madness subject Category:Popular_psychology.
- Prairie_madness comment "For the 1970s band, see Prairie Madness (band).Prairie madness or prairie fever was an affliction that affected western European settlers in the Great Plains during the migration to, and settlement of, the Canadian Prairies & the Western United States in the nineteenth century. Settlers moving from urbanized or relatively settled areas in the East faced the risk of mental breakdown caused by the harsh living conditions and the extreme levels of isolation on the prairie.".
- Prairie_madness label "Prairie madness".
- Prairie_madness sameAs Q7238040.
- Prairie_madness sameAs m.05k2nc.
- Prairie_madness sameAs Q7238040.
- Prairie_madness wasDerivedFrom Prairie_madness?oldid=706207405.
- Prairie_madness depiction Grand_Forks,_ND_store_1880.jpg.
- Prairie_madness isPrimaryTopicOf Prairie_madness.