Romanticism and schizophrenia. First part: The recency hypothesis and the core Gestalt of the disease

Authors

  • Juan J. López-Ibor Departamento de Psiquiatría Facultad de Medicina Universidad Complutense de Madrid Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria del Hospital Clínico San Carlos (IdISSC) Fundación Juan José López-Ibor Madrid. España
  • María I. López-Ibor Departamento de Psiquiatría Facultad de Medicina Universidad Complutense de Madrid Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria del Hospital Clínico San Carlos (IdISSC) Fundación Juan José López-Ibor Madrid. España

Keywords:

Schizophrenia, Hypothesis of the recent appearance (recency) of schizophrenia, History of psychiatry, King Lear, Don Quixote, Individuality, Selfhood, Ipseity, The fundamental alteration of schizophrenia

Abstract

Descriptions of irrational, incomprehensible, or unconstrained behavior such as is common nowadays in patients suffering from severe mental disorders can be found in the Bible, in Mesopotamian scripts, in classical Greek and Roman literature, and in the writings of many non-Western cultures. However, the presence of full-blown features of schizophrenia as seen today in psychiatric settings is controversial. Typical symptoms, the expected onset, duration and outcome, the impact of the disease on psychic functioning and the associated disability of the disease are mostly absent in those texts. Torrey (1980) and Hare (1988) have claimed that the disease did not exist before the year 1800 (this is known as the recency hypothesis). This would be the consequence of biological factors such as viruses, genetic or dietary factors or environmental contaminants associated to civilization. Others have put the emphasis on industrialization and its repercussions on social conditions such as family structure and migration.

After analyzing the many manifestations of insanity in literary characters, in medical texts and in key historical figures, the arguments presented in this paper tend to support the recency hypothesis. A review of the core characteristics of schizophrenia and its impact on selfhood, intersubjetivity and ipseity, topics relatively neglected in recent psychiatric literature, opens the doors to consider in a second part the relationship between the features of Romanticism, starting by the “discovery of intimacy”, and its articulation with the disturbance of ipseity and selfhood characteristic of the disease.

Published

2014-07-01

How to Cite

López-Ibor, Juan J., and María I. López-Ibor. “Romanticism and Schizophrenia. First Part: The Recency Hypothesis and the Core Gestalt of the Disease”. Actas Españolas De Psiquiatría, vol. 42, no. 4, July 2014, pp. 133-58, https://actaspsiquiatria.es/index.php/actas/article/view/525.

Issue

Section

Original