History of the Hysterical Man
Doctors once thought that only women suffered from hysteria, but a medical historian says that men were always just as susceptible
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian.com, January 05, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
I joke with my colleagues that, despite the title, this book is not my autobiography. But it does help to be somewhat self-aware psychologically. For me it’s a fascination with a behavior pattern that is opposite my own. Obsession and over-control are my chosen pathologies, my neuroses of choice, and for that reason I’ve been interested in those who negotiate the world through hysterical outbursts.
How has post-traumatic stress disorder challenged and changed our understanding of hysteria?
There should be an entire successor volume beginning with World War I and shell shock and coming up to the present. What some people started calling “male hysteria” was relabeled “shell shock” early in the 20th century. The relabeling is interesting because the term is new, not associated with women, and still suggests an honorable cause, a physical trauma to the nerves. These cases almost exclusively involved men, engaged in an honorable male activity. Since about 1980 they’ve used the term post-traumatic stress disorder. It’s extremely easy to show continuity between the symptoms of late 19th-century male hysteria, World War I shell shock, and present-day PTSD. The sign that suggests that we’ve made progress is that less and less in cases of PTSD is seen as comprising a soldier’s general identity, as something unmasculine.
What men in the modern popular culture would have been described as hysterics? Tony Soprano comes to mind.
A stereotypical example is Woody Allen, but Tony Soprano is a good one. He is struggling with a different model of manhood, one that is gritty and violent, and ethnic and Italian. He breaks out into these unexplained rashes and anxiety fits. He wants the doctors to find an organic cause so he doesn’t have to be considered a “head case.”
He’s trying so hard officially to be hyper-masculine, to be an Italian, to have sex with strange women and so forth but he can’t handle his own neuroses.
How will new technology, the emotional outlets online, change our understanding of the male mind?
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Comments (2)
There was also a time not so long ago (the 1970s and 1980s) that sufferers of migraine episodes were told that "only women had them", as well. These weren't general practitioners, but neurologists. Male breast cancer was dismissed as an anomaly until several male athletes developed it and brought it to light. Sexist medicine has to stop.
Posted by Jan Janusz on February 1,2009 | 07:42 PM
"Anyone who is interested or thinks they are suffering can go online and inevitably find chat rooms, self-help literature, a lot of information. They self-diagnose, search out a therapist, or share illness stories. There’s a lot of medical self-fashioning going on today as a result of the electronic media, which helps us determine how we should think about ourselves, in health and in sickness. You might say women were more inclined to do this, but I don’t think so." Couldn't agree more. knowledge is not always good if its not used wisely but like everything and anything it's debateable.....
Posted by on January 9,2009 | 09:47 PM