II.
Hysteria and the Question of Its Relation to the Sexual
Emotions--The Early Greek Theories of its Nature and Causation--The
Gradual Rise of Modern Views--Charcot--The Revolt Against
Charcot's Too Absolute Conclusions--Fallacies Involved--Charcot's
Attitude the Outcome of his Personal Temperament--Breuer
and Freud--Their Views Supplement and Complete Charcot's--At
the Same Time they Furnish a Justification for the Earlier
Doctrine of Hysteria--But They Must Not be Regarded as
Final--The Diffused Hysteroid Condition in Normal Persons--The
Physiological Basis of Hysteria--True Pathological Hysteria
is Linked on to almost Normal States, especially to Sex-hunger.
The nocturnal hallucinations of hysteria, as all careful
students of this condition now seem to agree, are closely
allied to the hysterical attack proper. Sollier, indeed,
one of the ablest of the more recent investigators of
hysteria, has argued with much force that the subjects
of hysteria really live in a state of pathological sleep,
of vigilambulism.[251] He regards all the various accidents
of hysteria as having a common basis in disturbances of
sensibility, in the widest sense of the word "sensibility,"--as
the very foundation of personality,--while anaesthesia
is "the real _sigillum hysteriae_." Whatever
the form of hysteria, we are thus only concerned with
a more or less profound state of vigilambulism: a state
in which the subject seems, often even to himself, to
be more or less always asleep, whether the sleep may be
regarded as local or general. Sollier agrees with Fere
that the disorder of sensibility may be regarded as due
to an exhaustion of the sensory centres of the brain,
whether as the result of constitutional cerebral weakness,
of the shock of a violent emotion, or of some toxic influence
on the cerebral cells.
We may, therefore, fitly turn from the auto-erotic phenomena
of sleep which in women generally, and especially in hysterical
women, seem to possess so much importance and significance,
to the question--which has been so divergently answered
at different periods and by different investigators--concerning
the causation of hysteria, and especially concerning its
alleged connection with conscious or unconscious sexual
emotion.[252]
It was the belief of the ancient Greeks that hysteria
came from the womb; hence its name. We first find that
statement in Plato's _Timaeus_: "In men the organ
of generation--becoming rebellious and masterful, like
an animal disobedient to reason, and maddened with the
sting of lust--seeks to gain absolute sway; and the same
is the case with the so-called womb, or uterus, of women;
the animal within them is desirous of procreating children,
and, when remaining unfruitful long beyond its proper
time, gets discontented and angry, and, wandering in every
direction through the body, closes up the passages of
the breath, and, by obstructing respiration,[253] drives
them to extremity, causing all varieties of disease."
Plato, it is true, cannot be said to reveal anywhere a
very scientific attitude toward Nature. Yet he was here
probably only giving expression to the current medical
doctrine of his day. We find precisely the same doctrine
attributed to Hippocrates, though without a clear distinction
between hysteria and epilepsy.[254] If we turn to the
best Roman physicians we find again that Aretaeus, "the
Esquirol of antiquity," has set forth the same view,
adding to his description of the movements of the womb
in hysteria: "It delights, also, in fragrant smells,
and advances toward them; and it has an aversion to foetid
smells, and flies from them; and, on the whole, the womb
is like an animal within an animal."[255] Consequently,
the treatment was by applying foetid smells to the nose
and rubbing fragrant ointments around the sexual parts.[256]
The Arab physicians, who carried on the traditions of
Greek medicine, appear to have said nothing new about
hysteria, and possibly had little knowledge of it. In
Christian mediaeval Europe, also, nothing new was added
to the theory of hysteria; it was, indeed, less known
medically than it had ever been, and, in part it may be
as a result of this ignorance, in part as a result of
general wretchedness (the hysterical phenomena of witchcraft
reaching their height, Michelet points out, in the fourteenth
century, which was a period of special misery for the
poor), it flourished more vigorously. Not alone have we
the records of nervous epidemics, but illuminated manuscripts,
ivories, miniatures, bas-reliefs, frescoes, and engravings
furnish the most vivid iconographic evidence of the prevalence
of hysteria in its most violent forms during the Middle
Ages. Much of this evidence is brought to the service
of science in the fascinating works of Dr. P. Richer,
one of Charcot's pupils.[257]
In the seventeenth century Ambroise Pare was still talking,
like Hippocrates, about "suffocation of the womb";
Forestus was still, like Aretaeus, applying friction to
the vulva; Fernel was still reproaching Galen, who had
denied that the movements of the womb produced hysteria.
It was in the seventeenth century (1618) that a French
physician, Charles Lepois (Carolus Piso), physician to
Henry II, trusting, as he said, to experience and reason,
overthrew at one stroke the doctrine of hysteria that
had ruled almost unquestioned for two thousand years,
and showed that the malady occurred at all ages and in
both sexes, that its seat was not in the womb, but in
the brain, and that it must be considered a nervous disease.[258]
So revolutionary a doctrine could not fail to meet with
violent opposition, but it was confirmed by Willis, and
in 1681, we owe to the genius of Sydenham a picture of
hysteria which for lucidity, precision, and comprehensiveness
has only been excelled in our own times.
It was not possible any longer to maintain the womb theory
of Hippocrates in its crude form, but in modified forms,
and especially with the object of preserving the connection
which many observers continued to find between hysteria
and the sexual emotions, it still found supporters in
the eighteenth and even the nineteenth centuries. James,
in the middle of the eighteenth century, returned to the
classical view, and in his _Dictionary of Medicine_ maintained
that the womb is the seat of hysteria. Louyer Villermay
in 1816 asserted that the most frequent causes of hysteria
are deprivation of the pleasures of love, griefs connected
with this passion, and disorders of menstruation. Foville
in 1833 and Landouzy in 1846 advocated somewhat similar
views. The acute Laycock in 1840 quoted as "almost
a medical proverb" the saying, "_Salacitas major,
major ad hysteriam proclivitas_," fully indorsing
it. More recently still Clouston has defined hysteria
as "the loss of the inhibitory influence exercised
on the reproductive and sexual instincts of women by the
higher mental and moral functions" (a position evidently
requiring some modification in view of the fact that hysteria
is by no means confined to women), while the same authority
remarks that more or less concealed sexual phenomena are
the chief symptoms of "hysterical insanity."[259]
Two gynaecologists of high position in different parts
of the world, Hegar in Germany and Balls-Headley in Australia,
attribute hysteria, as well as anaemia, largely to unsatisfied
sexual desire, including the non-satisfaction of the "ideal
feelings."[260] Lombroso and Ferrero, again, while
admitting that the sexual feelings might be either heightened
or depressed in hysteria, referred to the frequency of
what they termed "a paradoxical sexual instinct"
in the hysterical, by which, for instance, sexual frigidity
is combined with intense sexual pre-occupations; and they
also pointed out the significant fact that the crimes
of the hysterical nearly always revolve around the sexual
sphere.[261] Thus, even up to the time when the conception
of hysteria which absolutely ignored and excluded any
sexual relationship whatever had reached its height, independent
views favoring such a relationship still found expression.
Of recent years, however, such views usually aroused violent
antagonism. The main current of opinion was with Briquet
(1859), who, treating the matter with considerable ability
and a wide induction of facts, indignantly repelled the
idea that there is any connection between hysteria and
the sexual facts of life, physical or psychic. As he himself
admitted, Briquet was moved to deny a sexual causation
of hysteria by the thought that such an origin would be
degrading for women ("_a quelque chose de degradant
pour les femmes_").
It was, however, the genius of Charcot, and the influence
of his able pupils, which finally secured the overthrow
of the sexual theory of hysteria. Charcot emphatically
anathematized the visceral origin of hysteria; he declared
that it is a psychic disorder, and to leave no loop-hole
of escape for those who maintained a sexual causation
he asserted that there are no varieties of hysteria, that
the disease is one and indivisible. Charcot recognized
no primordial cause of hysteria beyond heredity, which
here plays a more important part than in any other neuropathic
condition. Such heredity is either direct or more occasionally
by transformation, any deviation of nutrition found in
the ancestors (gout, diabetes, arthritis) being a possible
cause of hysteria in the descendants. "We do not
know anything about the nature of hysteria," Charcot
wrote in 1892; "we must make it objective in order
to recognize it. The dominant idea for us in the etiology
of hysteria is, in the widest sense, its hereditary predisposition.
The greater number of those suffering from this affection
are simply born _hysterisables_, and on them the occasional
causes act directly, either through autosuggestion or
by causing derangement of general nutrition, and more
particularly of the nutrition of the nervous system."[262]
These views were ably and decisively stated in Gilles
de la Tourette's _Traite de l'Hysterie_, written under
the inspiration of Charcot.
While Charcot's doctrine was thus being affirmed and generally
accepted, there were at the same time workers in these
fields who, though they by no means ignored this doctrine
of hysteria or even rejected it, were inclined to think
that it was too absolutely stated. Writing in the _Dictionary
of Psychological Medicine_ at the same time as Charcot,
Donkin, while deprecating any exclusive emphasis on the
sexual causation, pointed out the enormous part played
by the emotions in the production of hysteria, and the
great influence of puberty in women due to the greater
extent of the sexual organs, and the consequently large
area of central innervation involved, and thus rendered
liable to fall into a state of unstable equilibrium. Enforced
abstinence from the gratification of any of the inherent
and primitive desires, he pointed out, may be an adequate
exciting cause. Such a view as this indicated that to
set aside the ancient doctrine of a physical sexual cause
of hysteria was by no means to exclude a psychic sexual
cause. Ten years earlier Axenfeld and Huchard had pointed
out that the reaction against the sexual origin of hysteria
was becoming excessive, and they referred to the evidence
brought forward by veterinary surgeons showing that unsatisfied
sexual desire in animals may produce nervous symptoms
very similar to hysteria.[263] The present writer, when
in 1894 briefly discussing hysteria as an element in secondary
sexual characterization, ventured to reflect the view,
confirmed by his own observation, that there was a tendency
to unduly minimize the sexual factor in hysteria, and
further pointed out that the old error of a special connection
between hysteria and the female sexual organs, probably
arose from the fact that in woman the organic sexual sphere
is larger than in man.[264]
When, indeed, we analyze the foundation of the once predominant
opinions of Charcot and his school regarding the sexual
relationships of hysteria, it becomes clear that many
fallacies and misunderstandings were involved. Briquet,
Charcot's chief predecessor, acknowledged that his own
view was that a sexual origin of hysteria would be "degrading
to women"; that is to say, he admitted that he was
influenced by a foolish and improper prejudice, for the
belief that the unconscious and involuntary morbid reaction
of the nervous system to any disturbance of a great primary
instinct can have "_quelque chose de degradant_"
is itself an immoral belief; such disturbance of the nervous
system might or might not be caused, but in any case the
alleged "degradation" could only be the fiction
of a distorted imagination. Again, confusion had been
caused by the ancient error of making the physical sexual
organs responsible for hysteria, first the womb, more
recently the ovaries; the outcome of this belief was the
extirpation of the sexual organs for the cure of hysteria.
Charcot condemned absolutely all such operations as unscientific
and dangerous, declaring that there is no such thing as
hysteria of menstrual origin.[265] Subsequently, Angelucci
and Pierracini carried out an international inquiry into
the results of the surgical treatment of hysteria, and
condemned it in the most unqualified manner.[266] It is
clearly demonstrated that the physical sexual organs are
not the seat of hysteria. It does not, however, follow
that even physical sexual desire, when repressed, is not
a cause of hysteria. The opinion that it was so formed
an essential part of the early doctrine of hysteria, and
was embodied in the ancient maxim: "_Nubat illa et
morbus effugiet_." The womb, it seemed to the ancients,
was crying out for satisfaction, and when that was received
the disease vanished.[267] But when it became clear that
sexual desire, though ultimately founded on the sexual
apparatus, is a nervous and psychic fact, to put the sexual
organs out of count was not sufficient; for the sexual
emotions may exist before puberty, and persist after complete
removal of the sexual organs. Thus it has been the object
of many writers to repel the idea that unsatisfied sexual
desire can be a cause of hysteria. Briquet pointed out
that hysteria is rare among nuns and frequent among prostitutes.
Krafft-Ebing believed that most hysterical women are not
anxious for sexual satisfaction, and declared that "hysteria
caused through the non-satisfaction of the coarse sensual
sexual impulse I have never seen,"[268] while Pitres
and others refer to the frequently painful nature of sexual
hallucinations in the hysterical. But it soon becomes
obvious that the psychic sexual sphere is not confined
to the gratification of conscious physical sexual desire.
It is not true that hysteria is rare among nuns, some
of the most tremendous epidemics of hysteria, and the
most carefully studied, having occurred in convents,[269]
while the hysterical phenomena sometimes associated with
revivals are well known. The supposed prevalence among
prostitutes would not be evidence against the sexual relationships
of hysteria; it has, however, been denied, even by so
great an authority as Parent-Duchatelet who found it very
rare, even in prostitutes in hospitals, when it was often
associated with masturbation; in prostitutes, however,
who returned to a respectable life, giving up their old
habits, he found hysteria common and severe.[270] The
frequent absence of physical sexual feeling, again, may
quite reasonably be taken as evidence of a disorder of
the sexual emotions, while the undoubted fact that sexual
intercourse usually has little beneficial effect on pronounced
hysteria, and that sexual excitement during sleep and
sexual hallucinations are often painful in the same condition,
is far from showing that injury or repression of the sexual
emotions had nothing to do with the production of the
hysteria. It would be as reasonable to argue that the
evil effect of a heavy meal on a starving man must be
taken as evidence that he was not suffering from starvation.
The fact, indeed, on which Gilles de la Tourette and others
have remarked, that the hysterical often desire not so
much sexual intercourse as simple affection, would tend
to show that there is here a real analogy, and that starvation
or lesion of the sexual emotions may produce, like bodily
starvation, a rejection of those satisfactions which are
demanded in health. Thus, even a mainly _a priori_ examination
of the matter may lead us to see that many arguments brought
forward in favor of Charcot's position on this point fall
to the ground when we realize that the sexual emotions
may constitute a highly complex sphere, often hidden from
observation, sometimes not conscious at all, and liable
to many lesions besides that due to the non-satisfaction
of sexual desire. At the same time we are not thus enabled
to overthrow any of the positive results attained by Charcot
and his school.
It may, however, be pointed out that Charcot's attitude
toward hysteria was the outcome of his own temperament.
He was primarily a neurologist, the bent of his genius
was toward the investigation of facts that could be objectively
demonstrated. His first interest in hysteria, dating from
as far back as 1862, was in hystero-epileptic convulsive
attacks, and to the last he remained indifferent to all
facts which could not be objectively demonstrated. That
was the secret of the advances he was enabled to make
in neurology. For purely psychological investigation he
had no liking, and probably no aptitude. Anyone who was
privileged to observe his methods of work at the Salpetriere
will easily recall the great master's towering figure;
the disdainful expression, sometimes, even, it seemed,
a little sour; the lofty bearing which enthusiastic admirers
called Napoleonic. The questions addressed to the patient
were cold, distant, sometimes impatient. Charcot clearly
had little faith in the value of any results so attained.
One may well believe, also, that a man whose superficial
personality was so haughty and awe-inspiring to strangers
would, in any case, have had the greatest difficulty in
penetrating the mysteries of a psychic world so obscure
and elusive as that presented by the hysterical.[271]
The way was thus opened for further investigations on
the psychic side. Charcot had affirmed the power, not
only of physical traumatism, but even of psychic lesions--of
moral shocks--to provoke its manifestations, but his sole
contribution to the psychology of this psychic malady,--and
this was borrowed from the Nancy school,--lay in the one
word "suggestibility"; the nature and mechanism
of this psychic process he left wholly unexplained. This
step has been taken by others, in part by Janet, who,
from 1889 onward, has not only insisted that the emotions
stand in the first line among the causes of hysteria,
but has also pointed out some portion of the mechanism
of this process; thus, he saw the significance of the
fact, already recognized, that strong emotions tend to
produce anaesthesia and to lead to a condition of mental
disaggregation, favorable to abulia, or abolition of will-power.
It remained to show in detail the mechanism by which the
most potent of all the emotions effects its influence,
and, by attempting to do this, the Viennese investigators,
Breuer and especially Freud, have greatly aided the study
of hysteria.[272] They have not, it is important to remark,
overturned the positive elements in their great forerunner's
work. Freud began as a disciple of Charcot, and he himself
remarks that, in his earlier investigations of hysteria,
he had no thought of finding any sexual etiology for that
malady; he would have regarded any such suggestion as
an insult to his patient. The results reached by these
workers were the outcome of long and detailed investigation.
Freud has investigated many cases of hysteria in minute
detail, often devoting to a single case over a hundred
hours of work. The patients, unlike those on whom the
results of the French school have been mainly founded,
all belonged to the educated classes, and it was thus
possible to carry out an elaborate psychic investigation
which would be impossible among the uneducated. Breuer
and Freud insist on the fine qualities of mind and character
frequently found among the hysterical. They cannot accept
suggestibility as an invariable characteristic of hysteria,
only abnormal excitability; they are far from agreeing
with Janet (although on many points at one with him),
that psychic weakness marks hysteria; there is merely
an appearance of mental weakness, they say, because the
mental activity of the hysterical is split up, and only
a part of it is conscious.[273] The superiority of character
of the hysterical is indicated by the fact that the conflict
between their ideas of right and the bent of their inclinations
is often an element in the constitution of the hysterical
state. Breuer and Freud are prepared to assert that the
hysterical are among "the flower of humanity,"
and they refer to those qualities of combined imaginative
genius and practical energy which characterized St. Theresa,
"the patron saint of the hysterical."
To understand the position of Breuer and Freud we may
start from the phenomenon of "nervous shock"
produced by physical traumatism, often of a very slight
character. Charcot had shown that such "nervous shock,"
with the chain of resulting symptoms, is nothing more
or less than hysteria. Breuer and Freud may be linked
on to Charcot at this point. They began by regarding the
most typical hysteria as really a _psychic traumatism_;
that is to say, that it starts in a lesion, or rather
in repeated lesions, of the emotional organism. It is
true that the school of Charcot admitted the influence
of moral shock, especially of the emotion of fear, but
that merely as an "_agent provocateur_," and
with a curious perversity Gilles de la Tourette, certainly
reflecting the attitude of Charcot, in his elaborate treatise
on hysteria fails to refer to the sphere of the sexual
emotions even when enumerating the "_agents provocateurs_."[274]
The influence of fear is not denied by Breuer and Freud,
but they have found that careful psychic analysis frequently
shows that the shock of a commonplace "fear"
is really rooted in a lesion of the sexual emotions. A
typical and very simple illustration is furnished in a
case, recorded by Breuer, in which a young girl of seventeen
had her first hysterical attack after a cat sprang on
her shoulders as she was going downstairs. Careful investigation
showed that this girl had been the object of somewhat
ardent attentions from a young man whose advances she
had resisted, although her own sexual emotions had been
aroused. A few days before, she had been surprised by
this young man on these same dark stairs, and had forcibly
escaped from his hands. Here was the real psychic traumatism,
the operation of which merely became manifest in the cat.
"But in how many cases," asks Breuer, "is
a cat thus reckoned as a completely sufficient _causa
efficiens_?"
In every case that they have investigated Breuer and Freud
have found some similar secret lesion of the psychic sexual
sphere. In one case a governess, whose training has been
severely upright, is, in spite of herself and without
any encouragement, led to experience for the father of
the children under her care an affection which she refuses
to acknowledge even to herself; in another, a young woman
finds herself falling in love with her brother-in-law;
again, an innocent girl suddenly discovers her uncle in
the act of sexual intercourse with her playmate, and a
boy on his way home from school is subjected to the coarse
advances of a sexual invert. In nearly every case, as
Freud eventually found reason to believe, a primary lesion
of the sexual emotions dates from the period of puberty
and frequently of childhood, and in nearly every case
the intimately private nature of the lesion causes it
to be carefully hidden from everyone, and even to be unacknowledged
by the subject of it. In the earlier cases Breuer and
Freud found that a slight degree of hypnosis is necessary
to bring the lesion into consciousness, and the accuracy
of the revelations thus obtained has been tested by independent
witness. Freud has, however, long abandoned the induction
of any degree of hypnosis; he simply tries to arrange
that the patient shall feel absolutely free to tell her
own story, and so proceeds from the surface downwards,
slowly finding and piecing together such essential fragments
of the history as may be recovered, in the same way he
remarks, as the archaeologist excavates below the surface
and recovers and puts together the fragments of an antique
statue. Much of the material found, however, has only
a symbolic value requiring interpretation and is sometimes
pure fantasy. Freud now attaches great importance to dreams
as symbolically representing much in the subject's mental
history which is otherwise difficult to reach.[275] The
subtle and slender clues which Freud frequently follows
in interpreting dreams cannot fail sometimes to arouse
doubt in his readers' minds, but he certainly seems to
have been often successful in thus reaching latent facts
in consciousness. The primary lesion may thus act as "a
foreign body in consciousness." Something is introduced
into psychic life which refuses to merge in the general
flow of consciousness. It cannot be accepted simply as
other facts of life are accepted; it cannot even be talked
about, and so submitted to the slow usure by which our
experiences are worn down and gradually transformed. Breuer
illustrates what happens by reference to the sneezing
reflex. "When an irritation to the nasal mucous membrane
for some reason fails to liberate this reflex, a feeling
of excitement and tension arises. This excitement, being
unable to stream out along motor channels, now spreads
itself over the brain, inhibiting other activities....
_In the highest spheres of human activity we may watch
the same process_." It is a result of this process
that, as Breuer and Freud found, the mere act of confession
may greatly relieve the hysterical symptoms produced by
this psychic mechanism, and in some cases may wholly and
permanently remove them. It is on this fact that they
founded their method of treatment, devised by Breuer and
by him termed the cathartic method, though Freud prefers
to call it the "analytic" method. It is, as
Freud points out, the reverse of the hypnotic method of
suggestive treatment; there is the same difference, Freud
remarks, between the two methods as Leonardo da Vinci
found for the two technical methods of art, _per via di
porre_ and _per via di levare_; the hypnotic method, like
painting, works by putting in, the cathartic or analytic
method, like sculpture, works by taking out.[276]
It is part of the mechanism of this process, as understood
by these authors, that the physical symptoms of hysteria
are constituted, by a process of conversion, out of the
injured emotions, which then sink into the background
or altogether out of consciousness. Thus, they found the
prolonged tension of nursing a near and dear relative
to be a very frequent factor in the production of hysteria.
For instance, an originally rheumatic pain experienced
by a daughter when nursing her father becomes the symbol
in memory of her painful psychic excitement, and this
perhaps for several reasons, but chiefly because _its
presence in consciousness almost exactly coincided with
that excitement_. In another way, again, nausea and vomiting
may become a symbol through the profound sense of disgust
with which some emotional shock was associated. Then the
symbol begins to have a life of its own, and draws hidden
strength from the emotion with which it is correlated.
Breuer and Freud have found by careful investigation that
the pains and physical troubles of hysteria are far from
being capricious, but may be traced in a varying manner
to an origin in some incident, some pain, some action,
which was associated with a moment of acute psychic agony.
The process of conversion was an involuntary escape from
an intolerable emotion, comparable to the physical pain
sometimes sought in intense mental grief, and the patient
wins some relief from the tortured emotions, though at
the cost of psychic abnormality, of a more or less divided
state of consciousness and of physical pain, or else anaesthesia.
In Charcot's third stage of the hysterical convulsion,
that of "_attitudes passionnelles_," Breuer
and Freud see the hallucinatory reproduction of a recollection
which is full of significance for the origin of the hysterical
manifestations.
The final result reached by these workers is clearly stated
by each writer. "The main observation of our predecessors,"
states Breuer,[277] "still preserved in the word
'hysteria,' is nearer to the truth than the more recent
view which puts sexuality almost in the last line, with
the object of protecting the patient from moral reproaches.
Certainly the sexual needs of the hysterical are just
as individual and as various in force as those of the
healthy. But they suffer from them, and in large measure,
indeed, they suffer precisely through the struggle with
them, through the effort to thrust sexuality aside."
"The weightiest fact," concludes Freud,[278]
"on which we strike in a thorough pursuit of the
analysis is this: From whatever side and from whatever
symptoms we start, we always unfailingly reach the region
of the sexual life. Here, first of all, an etiological
condition of hysterical states is revealed.... At the
bottom of every case of hysteria--and reproducible by
an analytical effort after even an interval of long years--may
be found one or more facts of precocious sexual experience
belonging to earliest youth. I regard this as an important
result, as the discovery of a _caput Nili_ of neuropathology."
Ten years later, enlarging rather than restricting his
conception, Freud remarks: "Sexuality is not a mere
_deus ex machina_ which intervenes but once in the hysterical
process; it is the motive force of every separate symptom
and every expression of a symptom. The morbid phenomena
constitute, to speak plainly, the patient's sexual activity."[279]
The actual hysterical fit, Freud now states, may be regarded
as "the substitute for a once practiced and then
abandoned _auto-erotic_ satisfaction," and similarly
it may be regarded as an equivalent of coitus.[280]
It is natural to ask how this conception affects that
elaborate picture of hysteria laboriously achieved by
Charcot and his school. It cannot be said that it abolishes
any of the positive results reached by Charcot, but it
certainly alters their significance and value; it presents
them in a new light and changes the whole perspective.
With his passion for getting at tangible definite physical
facts, Charcot was on very safe ground. But he was content
to neglect the psychic analysis of hysteria, while yet
proclaiming that hysteria is a purely psychic disorder.
He had no cause of hysteria to present save only heredity.
Freud certainly admits heredity, but, as he points out,
the part it plays has been overrated. It is too vague
and general to carry us far, and when a specific and definite
cause can be found, the part played by heredity recedes
to become merely a condition, the soil on which the "specific
etiology" works. Here probably Freud's enthusiasm
at first carried him too far and the most important modification
he has made in his views occurs at this point: he now
attaches a preponderant influence to heredity. He has
realized that sexual activity in one form or another is
far too common in childhood to make it possible to lay
very great emphasis on "traumatic lesions" of
this character, and he has also realized that an outcrop
of fantasies may somewhat later develop on these childish
activities, intervening between them and the subsequent
morbid symptoms. He is thus led to emphasize anew the
significance of heredity, not, however, in Charcot's sense,
as general neuropathic disposition but as "sexual
constitution." The significance of "infantile
sexual lesions" has also tended to give place to
that of "infantilism of sexuality."[281]
The real merit of Freud's subtle investigations is that--while
possibly furnishing a justification of the imperfectly-understood
idea that had floated in the mind of observers ever since
the name "hysteria" was first invented--he has
certainly supplied a definite psychic explanation of a
psychic malady. He has succeeded in presenting clearly,
at the expense of much labor, insight, and sympathy, a
dynamic view of the psychic processes involved in the
constitution of the hysterical state, and such a view
seems to show that the physical symptoms laboriously brought
to light by Charcot are largely but epiphenomena and by-products
of an emotional process, often of tragic significance
to the subject, which is taking place in the most sensitive
recess of the psychic organism. That the picture of the
mechanism involved, presented to us by Professor Freud,
cannot be regarded as a final and complete account of
the matter, may readily be admitted. It has developed
in Freud's own hands, and some of the developments will
require very considerable confirmation before they can
be accepted as generally true.[282] But these investigations
have at least served to open the door, which Charcot had
inconsistently held closed, into the deeper mysteries
of hysteria, and have shown that here, if anywhere, further
research will be profitable. They have also served to
show that hysteria may be definitely regarded as, in very
many cases at least, a manifestation of the sexual emotions
and their lesions; in other words, a transformation of
auto-erotism.
The conception of hysteria so vigorously enforced by Charcot
and his school is thus now beginning to appear incomplete.
But we have to recognize that that incompleteness was
right and necessary. A strong reaction was needed against
a widespread view of hysteria that was in large measure
scientifically false. It was necessary to show clearly
that hysteria is a definite disorder, even when the sexual
organs and emotions are swept wholly out of consideration;
and it was also necessary to show that the lying and dissimulation
so widely attributed to the hysterical were merely the
result of an ignorant and unscientific misinterpretation
of psychic elements of the disease. This was finally and
triumphantly achieved by Charcot's school.
There is only one other point in the explanation of hysteria
which I will here refer to, and that because it is usually
ignored, and because it has relationship to the general
psychology of the sexual emotions. I refer to that physiological
hysteria which is the normal counterpart of the pathological
hysteria which has been described in its physical details
by Charcot, and to which alone the term should strictly
be applied. Even though hysteria as a disease may be described
as one and indivisible, there are yet to be found, among
the ordinary and fairly healthy population, vague and
diffused hysteroid symptoms which are dissipated in a
healthy environment, or pass nearly unnoted, only to develop
in a small proportion of cases, under the influence of
a more pronounced heredity, or a severe physical or psychic
lesion, into that definite morbid state which is properly
called hysteria.
This diffused hysteroid condition may be illustrated by
the results of a psychological investigation carried on
in America by Miss Gertrude Stein among the ordinary male
and female students of Harvard University and Radcliffe
College. The object of the investigation was to study,
with the aid of a planchette, the varying liability to
automatic movements among normal individuals. Nearly one
hundred students were submitted to experiment. It was
found that automatic responses could be obtained in two
sittings from all but a small proportion of the students
of both sexes, but that there were two types of individual
who showed a special aptitude. One type (probably showing
the embryonic form of neurasthenia) was a nervous, high-strung,
imaginative type, not easily influenced from without,
and not so much suggestible as autosuggestible. The other
type, which is significant from our present point of view,
is thus described by Miss Stein: "In general the
individuals, often blonde and pale, are distinctly phlegmatic.
If emotional, decidedly of the weakest, sentimental order.
They may be either large, healthy, rather heavy, and lacking
in vigor or they may be what we call anaemic and phlegmatic.
Their power of concentrated attention is very small. They
describe themselves as never being held by their work;
they say that their minds wander easily; that they work
on after they are tired, and just keep pegging away. They
are very apt to have premonitory conversations, they anticipate
the words of their friends, they imagine whole conversations
that afterward come true. The feeling of having been there
is very common with them; that is, they feel under given
circumstances that they have had that identical experience
before in all its details. They are often fatalistic in
their ideas. They indulge in day-dreams. As a rule, they
are highly suggestible."[283]
There we have a picture of the physical constitution and
psychic temperament on which the classical symptoms of
hysteria might easily be built up.[284] But these persons
were ordinary students, and while a few of their characteristics
are what is commonly and vaguely called "morbid,"
on the whole they must be regarded as ordinarily healthy
individuals. They have the congenital constitution and
predisposition on which some severe psychic lesion at
the "psychological moment" might develop the
most definite and obstinate symptoms of hysteria, but
under favorable circumstances they will be ordinary men
and women, of no more than ordinary abnormality or ordinary
power. They are among the many who have been called to
hysteria at birth; they may never be among the few who
are chosen.
We may have to recognize that on the side of the sexual
emotions, as well as in general constitution, a condition
may be traced among normal persons that is hysteroid in
character, and serves as the healthy counterpart of a
condition which in hysteria is morbid. In women such a
condition Has been traced (though misnamed) by Dr. King.[285]
Dr. King describes what he calls "sexual hysteria
in women," which he considers a chief variety of
hysteria. He adds, however, that it is not strictly a
disease, but simply an automatic reaction of the reproductive
system, which tends to become abnormal under conditions
of civilization, and to be perpetuated in a morbid form.
In this condition he finds twelve characters: 1. Time
of life, usually between puberty and climacteric. 2. Attacks
rarely occur when subject is alone. 3. Subject appears
unconscious, but is not really so. 4. She is instinctively
ashamed afterward. 5. It occurs usually in single women,
or in those, single or married, whose sexual needs are
unsatisfied. 6. No external evidence of disease, and (as
Aitken pointed out) the nates are not flattened; the woman's
physical condition is not impaired, and she may be specially
attractive to men. 7. Warmth of climate and the season
of spring and summer are conducive to the condition. 8.
The paroxysm in short and temporary. 9. While light touches
are painful, firm pressure and rough handling give relief.
10. It may occur in the occupied, but an idle, purposeless
life is conducive. 11. The subject delights in exciting
sympathy and in being fondled and caressed. 12. There
is defect of will and a strong stimulus is required to
lead to action.
Among civilized women, the author proceeds, this condition
does not appear to subserve any useful purpose. "Let
us, however, go back to aboriginal woman--to woman of
the woods and the fields. Let us picture ourselves a young
aboriginal Venus in one of her earliest hysterical paroxysms.
In doing so, let us not forget some of the twelve characteristics
previously mentioned. She will not be 'acting her part'
alone, or, if alone, it will be in a place where someone
else is likely soon to discover her. Let this Venus be
now discovered by a youthful Apollo of the woods, a man
with fully developed animal instincts. He and she, like
any other animals, are in the free field of Nature. He
cannot but observe to himself: 'This woman is not dead;
she breathes and is warm; she does not look ill; she is
plump and rosy.' He speaks to her; she neither hears (apparently)
nor responds. Her eyes are closed. He touches, moves,
and handles her at his pleasure. She makes no resistance.
What will this primitive Apollo do next? He will cure
the fit, and bring the woman back to consciousness, satisfy
her emotions, and restore her volition--not by delicate
touches that might be 'agonizing' to her hyperesthetic
skin, but by vigorous massage, passive motions, and succussion
that would be painless. The emotional process on the part
of the woman would end, perhaps, with mingled laughter,
tears, and shame; and when accused afterward of the part
which the ancestrally acquired properties of her nervous
system had compelled her to act, as a preliminary to the
event, what woman would not deny it and be angry? But
the course of Nature having been followed, the natural
purpose of the hysterical paroxysm accomplished, there
would remain as a result of the treatment--instead of
one discontented woman--two happy people, and the possible
beginning of a third."
"Natural, primary sexual hysteria in woman,"
King concludes, "is a temporary modification of the
nervous government of the body and the distribution of
nerve-force (occurring for the most part, as we see it
to-day, in prudish women of strong moral principle, whose
volition has disposed them to resist every sort of liberty
or approach from the other sex), consisting in a transient
abdication of the general, volitional, and self-preservational
ego, while the reins of government are temporarily assigned
to the usurping power of the reproductive ego, so that
the reproductive government overrules the government by
volition, and thus, as it were, forcibly compels the woman's
organism to so dispose itself, at a suitable time and
place, as to allow, invite, and secure the approach of
the other sex, whether she will or not, to the end that
Nature's imperious demand for reproduction shall be obeyed."
This perhaps rather fantastic description is not a presentation
of hysteria in the technical sense, but we may admit that
it presents a state which, if not the real physiological
counterpart of the hysterical convulsion, is yet distinctly
analogous to the latter. The sexual orgasm has this correspondence
with the hysterical fit, that they both serve to discharge
the nervous centres and relieve emotional tension. It
may even happen, especially in the less severe forms of
hysteria, that the sexual orgasm takes place during the
hysterical fit; this was found by Rosenthal, of Vienna,
to be always the case in the semiconscious paroxysms of
a young girl whose condition was easily cured;[286] no
doubt such cases would be more frequently found if they
were sought for. In severe forms of hysteria, however,
it frequently happens, as so many observers have noted,
that normal sexual excitement has ceased to give satisfaction,
has become painful, perverted, paradoxical. Freud has
enabled us to see how a shock to the sexual emotions,
injuring the emotional life at its source, can scarcely
fail sometimes to produce such a result. But the necessity
for nervous explosion still persists.[287] It may, indeed,
persist, even in an abnormally strong degree, in consequence
of the inhibition of normal activities generally. The
convulsive fit is the only form of relief open to the
tension. "A lady whom I long attended," remarks
Ashwell, "always rejoiced when the fit was over,
since it relieved her system generally, and especially
her brain, from painful irritation which had existed for
several previous days." That the fit mostly fails
to give real satisfaction, and that it fails to cure the
disease, is due to the fact that it is a morbid form of
relief. The same character of hysteria is seen, with more
satisfactory results for the most part, in the influence
of external nervous shock. It was the misunderstood influence
of such shocks in removing hysteria which in former times
led to the refusal to regard hysteria as a serious disease.
During the Rebellion of 1745-46 in Scotland, Cullen remarks
that there was little hysteria. The same was true of the
French Revolution and of the Irish Rebellion, while Rush
(in a study _On the Influence of the American Revolution
on the Human Body_) observed that many hysterical women
were "restored to perfect health by the events of
the time." In such cases the emotional tension is
given an opportunity of explosion in new and impersonal
channels, and the chain of morbid personal emotions is
broken.
It has been urged by some that the fact that the sexual
orgasm usually fails to remove the disorder in true hysteria
excludes a sexual factor of hysteria. It is really, one
may point out, an argument in favor of such an element
as one of the factors of hysteria. If there were no initial
lesion of the sexual emotions, if the natural healthy
sexual channel still remained free for the passage of
the emotional overflow, then we should expect that it
would much oftener come into play in the removal of hysteria.
In the more healthy, merely hysteroid condition, the psychic
sexual organism is not injured, and still responds normally,
removing the abnormal symptoms when allowed to do so.
It is the confusion between this almost natural condition
and the truly morbid condition, alone properly called
hysteria, which led to the ancient opinion, inaugurated
by Plato and Hippocrates, that hysteria may be cured by
marriage.[288] The difference may be illustrated by the
difference between a distended bladder which is still
able to contract normally on its contents when at last
an opportunity of doing so is afforded and the bladder
in which distension has been so prolonged that nervous
control had been lost and spontaneous expulsion has become
impossible. The first condition corresponds to the constitution,
which, while simulating the hysterical condition, is healthy
enough to react normally in spite of psychic lesions;
the second corresponds to a state in which, owing to the
prolonged stress of psychic traumatism,--sexual or not,--a
definite condition of hysteria has arisen. The one state
is healthy, though abnormal; the other is one of pronounced
morbidity.
The condition of true hysteria is thus linked on to almost
healthy states, and especially to a condition which may
be described as one of sex-hunger. Such a suggestion may
help us to see these puzzling phenomena in their true
nature and perspective.
At this point I may refer to the interesting parallel,
and probable real relationship, between hysteria and chlorosis.
As Luzet has said, hysteria and chlorosis are sisters.
We have seen that there is some ground for regarding hysteria
as an exaggerated form of a normal process which is really
an auto-erotic phenomenon. There is some ground, also,
for regarding chlorosis as the exaggeration of a physiological
state connected with sexual conditions, more specifically
with the preparation for maternity. Hysteria is so frequently
associated with anaemic conditions that Biernacki has
argued that such conditions really constitute the primary
and fundamental cause of hysteria (_Neurologisches Centralblatt_,
March, 1898). And, centuries before Biernacki, Sydenham
had stated his belief that poverty of the blood is the
chief cause of hysteria.
It would be some confirmation of this position if we could
believe that chlorosis, like hysteria, is in some degree
a congenital condition. This was the view of Virchow,
who regarded chlorosis as essentially dependent on a congenital
hyoplasia of the arterial system. Stieda, on the basis
of an elaborate study of twenty-three cases, has endeavored
to prove that chlorosis is due to a congenital defect
of development (_Zeitschrift fuer Geburtshuelfe und Gynaekologie_,
vol. xxxii, Part I, 1895). His facts tend to prove that
in chlorosis there are signs of general ill-development,
and that, in particular, there is imperfect development
of the breasts and sexual organs, with a tendency to contracted
pelvis. Charrin, again, regards utero-ovarian inadequacy
as at least one of the factors of chlorosis. Chlorosis,
in its extreme form, may thus be regarded as a disorder
of development, a sign of physical degeneracy. Even if
not strictly a cause, a congenital condition may, as Stockman
believes (_British Medical Journal_, December 14, 1895),
be a predisposing influence.
However it may be in extreme cases, there is very considerable
evidence to indicate that the ordinary anaemia of young
women may be due to a storing up of iron in the system,
and is so far normal, being a preparation for the function
of reproduction. Some observations of Bunge's seem to
throw much light on the real cause of what may be termed
physiological chlorosis. He found by a series of experiments
on animals of different ages that young animals contain
a much greater amount of iron in their tissues than adult
animals; that, for instance, the body of a rabbit an hour
after birth contains more than four times as much iron
as that of a rabbit two and a half months old. It thus
appears probable that at the period of puberty, and later,
there is a storage of iron in the system preparatory to
the exercise of the maternal functions. It is precisely
between the ages of fifteen and twenty-three, as Stockman
found by an analysis of his own cases (_British Medical
Journal_, December 14, 1895), that the majority of cases
occur; there was, indeed, he found, no case in which the
first onset was later than the age of twenty-three. A
similar result is revealed by the charts of Lloyd Jones,
which cover a vastly greater number of cases.
We owe to Lloyd Jones an important contribution to the
knowledge of chlorosis in its physiological or normal
relationships. He has shown that chlorosis is but the
exaggeration of a condition that is normal at puberty
(and, in many women, at each menstrual period), and which,
there is good reason to believe, even has a favorable
influence on fertility. He found that light-complexioned
persons are more fertile than the dark-complexioned, and
that at the same time the blood of the latter is of less
specific gravity, containing less haemoglobin. Lloyd Jones
also reached the generalization that girls who have had
chlorosis are often remarkably pretty, so that the tendency
to chlorosis is associated with all the sexual and reproductive
aptitudes that make a woman attractive to a man. His conclusion
is that the normal condition of which chlorosis is the
extreme and pathological condition, is a preparation for
motherhood (E. Lloyd Jones, "Chlorosis: The Special
Anaemia of Young Women," 1897; also numerous reports
to the British Medical Association, published in the _British
Medical Journal_. There was an interesting discussion
of the theories of chlorosis at the Moscow International
Medical Congress, in 1898; see proceedings of the congress,
volume in, section v, pp. 224 et seq.).
We may thus, perhaps, understand why it is that hysteria
and anaemia are often combined, and why they are both
most frequently found in adolescent young women who have
yet had no sexual experiences. Chlorosis is a physical
phenomenon; hysteria, largely a psychic phenomenon; yet,
both alike may, to some extent at least, be regarded as
sexual aptitude showing itself in extreme and pathological
forms.
FOOTNOTES:
[251] _Genese et Nature de l'Hysterie_, 1898; and, for
Sollier's latest statement, see "Hysterie et Sommeil,"
_Archives de Neurologie_, May and June, 1907. Lombroso
(_L'Uomo Delinquente_, 1889, vol. ii, p. 329), referring
to the diminished metabolism of the hysterical, had already
compared them to hibernating animals, while Babinsky states
that the hysterical are in a state of subconsciousness,
a state, as Metchnikoff remarks (_Essais optimistes_,
p. 270), reminiscent of our prehistoric past.
[252] Professor Freud, while welcoming the introduction
of the term "auto-erotism," remarks that it
should not be made to include the whole of hysteria. This
I fully admit, and have never questioned. Hysteria is
far too large and complex a phenomenon to be classed as
entirely a manifestation of auto-erotism, but certain
aspects of it are admirable illustrations of auto-erotic
transformation.
[253] The hysterical phenomenon of _globus hystericus_
was long afterward attributed to obstruction of respiration
by the womb. The interesting case has been recorded by
E. Bloch (_Wiener Klinische Wochenschrift_, 1907, p. 1649)
of a lady who had the feeling of a ball rising from her
stomach to her throat, and then sinking. This feeling
was associated with thoughts of her husband's rising and
falling penis, and was always most liable to occur when
she wished for coitus.
[254] As Gilles de la Tourette points out, it is not difficult
to show that epilepsy, the _morbus sacer_ of the ancients,
owed much of its sacred character to this confusion with
hysteria. Those priestesses who, struck by the _morbus
sacer_, gave forth their oracles amid convulsions, were
certainly not the victims of epilepsy, but of hysteria
(_Traite de l'Hysterie_, vol. i, p. 3).
[255] Aretaeus, _On the Causes and Symptoms of Acute Diseases_,
Book ii, Chapter II.
[256] It may be noted that this treatment furnishes another
instance of the continuity of therapeutic methods, through
all changes of theory, from the earliest to the latest
times. Drugs of unpleasant odor, like asafoetida, have
always been used in hysteria, and scientific medicine
to-day still finds that asafoetida is a powerful sedative
to the uterus, controlling nervous conditions during pregnancy
and arresting uterine irritation when abortion is threatened
(see, e.g., Warman, _Der Frauenarzt_, August, 1895). Again,
the rubbing of fragrant ointments into the sexual regions
is but a form of that massage which is one of the modern
methods of treating the sexual disorders of women.
[257] _Les Demoniaques dans l'Art_, 1887; _Les Malades
et les Difformes dans l'Art_, 1889.
[258] Glafira Abricosoff, of Moscow, in her Paris thesis,
_L'Hysterie aux xvii et xviii siecles_, 1897, presents
a summary of the various views held at this time; as also
Gilles de la Tourette, _Traite de l'Hysterie_, vol. i,
Chapter I.
[259] _Edinburgh Medical Journal_, June, 1883, p. 1123,
and _Mental Diseases_, 1887, p. 488.
[260] Hegar, _Zusammenhang der Geschlechtskrankheiten
mit nervoesen Leiden_, Stuttgart, 1885. (Hegar, however,
went much further than this, and was largely responsible
for the surgical treatment of hysteria now generally recognized
as worse than futile.) Balls-Headley, "Etiology of
Nervous Diseases of the Female Genital Organs," Allbutt
and Playfair, _System of Gynecology_, 1896, p. 141.
[261] Lombroso and Ferrero, _La Donna Delinquente_, 1893,
pp. 613-14.
[262] Charcot and Marie, article on "Hysteria,"
Tuke's _Dictionary of Psychological Medicine_.
[263] Axenfeld and Huchard, _Traite des Nevroses_, 1883,
pp. 1092-94. Icard (_La Femme pendant la Periode Menstruelle_,
pp. 120-21) has also referred to recorded cases of hysteria
in animals (Coste's and Peter's cases), as has Gilles
de la Tourette (op. cit., vol. i, p. 123). See also, for
references, Fere, _L'Instinct Sexuel_, p. 59.
[264] _Man and Woman_, 4th ed., p. 326. A distinguished
gynaecologist, Matthews Duncan, had remarked some years
earlier (_Lancet_, May 18, 1889) that hysteria, though
not a womb disease, "especially attaches itself to
the generative system, because the genital system, more
than any other, exerts emotional power over the individual,
power also in morals, power in social questions."
[265] Gilles de la Tourette, _Archives de Tocologie et
de Gynecologie_, June, 1895.
[266] _Rivista Sperimentale di Freniatria_, 1897, p. 290;
summarized in the _Journal of Mental Science_, January,
1898.
[267] From the earliest times it was held that menstruation
favors hysteria; more recently, Landouzy recorded a number
of observations showing that hysterical attacks coincide
with perfectly healthy menstruation; while Ball has maintained
that it is only during menstruation that hysteria appears
in its true color. See the opinions collected by Icard,
_La Femme pendant la Periode Menstruelle_, pp. 75-81.
[268] Krafft-Ebing, "Ueber Neurosen und Psychosen
durch Sexuelle Abstinenz," _Jahrbuecher fuer Psychiatrie_,
vol. iii, 1888. It must, however, be added that the relief
of hysteria by sexual satisfaction is not rare, and that
Rosenthal finds that the convulsions are thus diminished.
(_Allgemeine Wiener Medizinal-Zeitung_, Nos. 46 and 47,
1887.) So they are also, in simple and uncomplicated cases,
according to Mongeri, by pregnancy.
[269] "All doctors who have patients in convents,"
remarks Marro (_La Puberta_, p. 338), "know how hysteria
dominates among them;" he adds that his own experience
confirms that of Raciborski, who found that nuns devoted
to the contemplative life are more liable to hysteria
than those who are occupied in teaching or in nursing.
It must be added, however, that there is not unanimity
as to the prevalence of hysteria in convents. Brachet
was of the same opinion as Briquet, and so considered
it rare. Imbert-Goubeyre, also (_La Stigmatisation_, p.
436) states that during more than forty years of medical
life, though he has been connected with a number of religious
communities, he has not found in them a single hysterical
subject, the reason being, he remarks, that the unbalanced
and extravagant are refused admission to the cloister.
[270] Parent-Duchatelet, _De la Prostitution_, vol. i,
p. 242.
[271] It may not be unnecessary to point out that here
and throughout, in speaking of the psychic mechanism of
hysteria, I do not admit that any process can be _purely_
psychic. As Fere puts it in an admirable study of hysteria
(_Twentieth Century Practice of Medicine_, 1897, vol.
x, p. 556): "In the genesis of hysterical troubles
everything takes place as if the psychical and the somatic
phenomena were two aspects of the same biological fact."
[272] Pierre Janet, _L'Automatisme Psychologique_, 1889;
_L'Etat mental des Hysteriques_, 1894; _Nevroses et Idees
fixes_, 1898; Breuer und Freud, _Studien ueber Hysterie_,
Vienna, 1895; the best introduction to Freud's work is,
however, to be found in the two series of his _Sammlung
Kleiner Schriften zur Neurosenlehre_, published in a collected
form in 1906 and 1909. It may be added that a useful selection
of Freud's papers has lately (1909) been published in
English.
[273] We might, perhaps, even say that in hysteria the
so-called higher centres have an abnormally strong inhibitory
influence over the lower centres. Gioffredi (_Gazzetta
degli Ospedali_, October 1, 1895) has shown that some
hysterical symptoms, such as mutism, can be cured by etherization,
thus loosening the control of the higher centres.
[274] Charcot's school could not fail to recognize the
erotic tone which often dominates hysterical hallucinations.
Gilles de la Tourette seeks to minimize it by the remark
that "it is more mental than real." He means
to say that it is more psychic than physical, but he implies
that the physical element in sex is alone "real,"
a strange assumption in any case, as well as destructive
of Gilles de la Tourette's own fundamental assertion that
hysteria is a real disease and yet purely psychic.
[275] See, e.g., his substantial volume, _Die Traumdeutung_,
1900, 2d ed. 1909.
[276] _Sammlung_, first series, p. 208.
[277] _Studien ueber Hysterie_, p. 217.
[278] _Sammlung_, first series, p. 162.
[279] _Sammlung_, second series, p. 102.
[280] Ib. p. 146.
[281] _Sammlung_, first series, p. 229. Freud has developed
his conception of sexual constitution in _Drei Abhandlungen
zur Sexualtheorie_, 1905.
[282] As Moll remarks, Freud's conceptions are still somewhat
subjective, and in need of objective demonstration; but
whatever may be thought of their theories, he adds, there
can be no doubt that Breuer and Freud have done a great
service by calling attention to the important action of
the sexual life on the nervous system.
[283] Gertrude Stein, "Cultivated Motor Automatism,"
_Psychological Review_, May, 1898.
[284] Charcot's most faithful followers refuse to recognize
a "hysteric temperament," and are quite right,
if such a conception is used to destroy the conception
of hysteria as a definite disease. We cannot, however,
fail to recognize a diathesis which, while still apparently
healthy, is predisposed to hysteria. So distinguished
a disciple of Charcot as Janet thoroughly recognizes this,
and argues (_L'Etat mental_, etc., p. 298) that "we
may find in the habits, the passions, the psychic automatism
of the normal man, the germ of all hysterical phenomena."
Fere held a somewhat similar view.
[285] A.F.A. King, "Hysteria," _American Journal
of Obstetrics_, May 18, 1891.
[286] M. Rosenthal, _Diseases of the Nervous System_,
vol. ii, p. 44. Fere notes similar cases (_Twentieth Century
Practice of Medicine_, vol. x, p. 551). Long previously,
Gall had recorded the case of a young widow of ardent
temperament who had convulsive attacks, apparently of
hysterical nature, which always terminated in sexual orgasm
(_Fonctions du Cerveau_, 1825, vol. iii, p. 245).
[287] There seems to be a greater necessity for such explosive
manifestations in women than in men, whatever the reason
may be. I have brought together some of the evidence pointing
in this direction in _Man and Woman_, 4th ed., revised
and enlarged, Chapters xii and xiii.
[288] There is no doubt an element of real truth in this
ancient belief, though it mainly holds good of minor cases
of hysteria. Many excellent authorities accept it. "Hysteria
is certainly common in the single," Herman remarks
(_Diseases of Women_, 1898, p. 33), "and is generally
cured by a happy marriage." Loewenfeld (_Sexualleben
und Nervenleiden_, p. 153) says that "it cannot be
denied that marriage produces a beneficial change in the
general condition of many hysterical patients," though,
he adds, it will not remove the hysterical temperament.
The advantage of marriage for the hysterical is not necessarily
due, solely or at all, to the exercise of sexual functions.
This is pointed out by Mongeri, who observes (_Allgemeine
Zeitschrift fuer Psychiatrie_, 1901, Heft 5, p. 917):
"I have known and treated several hysterical girls
who are now married, and do not show the least neuropathic
indications. Some of these no longer have any wish for
sexual gratification, and even fulfil their marital duties
unwillingly, though loving their husbands and living with
them in an extremely happy way. In my opinion, marriage
is a sovereign remedy for neuropathic women, who need
to find a support in another personality, able to share
with them the battle of life." |
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