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- Newsgroups: sci.psychology
- Path: sparky!uunet!nwnexus!seanews!eskimo!alpinist
- From: alpinist@eskimo.com (David Butler)
- Subject: Re: Charles Dickens & psychology
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.193707.4059@eskimo.com>
- Organization: =>ESKIMO NORTH (206) 367-3837 SEATTLE, WA.<=
- References: <1jho9aINNnsp@slab.mtholyoke.edu>
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 19:37:07 GMT
- Lines: 20
-
- In article <1jho9aINNnsp@slab.mtholyoke.edu> jpyle@MtHolyoke.edu (Jon Pyle) writes:
- > He lives happily, but whenever he suffers stress, he departs from reality,
- >thinks he is a shoemaker, and hammers away at shoes at his bench. While Dr.
- >Manette is doing this he is not his normal self; he works 9 to 5 is his room,
- >and feels only the responsibility to make shoes. Eventually, he 'wakes up'
- >and acts normal again, and has no memory of what happened. The remedy to this
- >disorder is to destroy the shoemaking bench.
- > Does this disorder actually exist? Charles Dickens could not have known
- >about neurosis, psychosis, regression, etc., so this disorder was made up.
-
- Well, I don't know about shoemakers but last century hatters would process
- the felt for their hats with mercury. Over time the mercury poisoning would
- get to the extent of creating severe neurological damage, which would give
- the person tics, memory loss and general 'crazy' behaviors. That's where we
- get the term 'mad as a hatter'. It's possible something similar could occur
- with shoemakers. But Dickens may just have been creatively inventive.
-
- --
- Dave alpinist@eskimo.com
- When the gods wish to punish us they answer our prayers - Oscar Wilde
-