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The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic
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Page 1: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic

Page 2: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.
Page 3: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893)

Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière

Clinico-Anatomic Method

Page 4: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Charcot (profile, far left) at theatrical reading,

with writers Emile Zola and Edmond de Goncourt

Page 5: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Photographic Iconography of theSalpêtrière (1876-77)

Page 6: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Charcot’s Four Stages of Grand Hysteria

1. Tonic rigidity: limb contractures that mimicked a typical epileptic fit.

2. Dramatic body movements: contortions, illogical movements; clownism.

3. Passionate Attitudes: expressions of vivid emotional states.

4. State of delirium

Page 7: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Stages of the Hysterical Attack

Page 8: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

“AUGUSTINE”

Page 9: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Beginning of the Attack

Page 10: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Tonic Rigidity—Stage 1

Page 11: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Contracture of the FaceStage 1

Page 12: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Stage 2—Clownisms, Illogical Movements “Circular Arch”

Page 13: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Passionate AttitudesStage 3

“Menace”

Page 14: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Passionate AttitudesStage 3

“Menace”

Page 15: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Passionate AttitudesStage 3

“Aural Hallucinations”

Page 16: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Passionate Attitudes: “Loving Supplication”

Page 17: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Passionate Attitudes“Ecstasy”

Page 18: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Passionate Attitudes:Crucifixion

Page 19: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Zones of Hysterical Anesthesia

Metalloscopy:Use of Magnets to

shift areas of anaesthesia

Page 20: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Artificial Contracture

Page 21: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Catalepsy produced by sound

Page 22: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Charcot and Blanche Wittman

Page 23: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.
Page 24: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

A Case of Traumatic Male Hysteria

Page 25: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Hippolyte Bernheim (1840-1919)

SuggestiveTherapeutics (1886)

head of the Nancy School

Page 26: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.
Page 27: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Pierre Janet (1859-1947)

Dissociation—Traumatic event and

accompanying memories split off from consciousness

Imperative Suggestion—suggestion that thesememories didn’t exist

Page 28: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Janet’s Somnabulisms• Monoideic—dominated by one idea,

usually a transient episode.

• Polyideic--complex states or ideas; called fugue states, could involve a loss of identity for extended period.

• Recriprocal or Dominating Somnabulism (double personalities)—relatively permanent transition into another state;

memory impaired across these states

Page 29: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Reciprocal SomnambulismLady MacNish/Mary Reynolds

Page 30: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Alfred Binet (1857-1911)

On Double Consciousness (1890)

Alterations of the Personality (1896)

Page 31: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Examples of Automatic Writing with an anesthetic hand

Binet (1890 and 1896)

Page 32: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Insensible Arm—hearing aMetronome

Sensible arm

Insensible arm while subjectcounted to five

Sensible Arm

Subject held dynamometer,connected to a

recording cylinder.Binet (1896, p. 201)

Page 33: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)

Page 34: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Freud’s Neuropathological Training

• At the Institute of physiology in Vienna, headed by Ernst Brücke (1876)

• In the neuro-anatomical laboratory of Theodor Meynert (1883-1886)

Page 35: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Freud’s 1877 publication on the function of the large Reissner cells in the spinal cord of primitive fish Petromyzon, assigned

to him by Professor Ernst Brücke.

Page 36: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Freud’s unpublished manuscript

for a scientific psychologyof 1895

Page 37: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Berggasse 19, Vienna (May 1938)

Page 38: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Joseph Breuer (1842-1925)

STUDIES ON HYSTERIA1895

Breuer and Freud

Page 39: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Anna O./ Bertha Pappenheim (1859-1936)

“TALKING CURE” or

“CHIMNEY SWEEPING”

Page 40: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Cathartic Method or Abreaction

• An original response to a traumatic event is suppressed, and the affect or emotion is not expressed

• The original affect then expresses itself in bodily symptoms, a process called hysterical conversion

• Cure consists of verbally reviewing the event, and releasing the original affect.

Page 41: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Carl Jung (1875-1961)

“Psychological Complex”

Uncovered with the use of association tests

with patients

Collaborated with Freud 1906-1912

Page 42: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Freud’s couch – for use of“free association” technique

Page 43: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Freud and his Couch

Page 44: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Active Repression: patient was motivated to actively repress traumatic information from consciousness.

Content of repressed material was often sexual.

Freud’s formulated the Seduction Theory in 1890s and rejected it in 1897.

Page 45: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Controversial 1980’s Historiography on Freud

Page 46: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Freud’s Structural Model of the Mind, 1923

• ID: locus of fantasies, desire, unconscious

• EGO: emerged from Id, but had adapted to society

• EGO-IDEAL (Super-ego): source of repression, moral conscience

Page 47: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Manifest Content of Dream—its story-line, a conscious process

DREAM CENSOR—lets some information out, represses, disguises other information

Latent Content of Dream—dream thoughts, unconscious, often unacceptable wishes

Page 48: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Traumdeutung, Interpretation of Dreams (1900)

• Condensation: dream concentrates or compresses a number of different ideas into one; a composite picture.

• Displacement: transformation of dream thoughts into more acceptable thoughts in order to conceal unconscious meaning.

• Representation: all material gathered into a single situation in the dream.

• Symbolization: a certain set of symbols exist in unconscious, and become part of the dream.

Page 49: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

International Psychoanalytic Congress, Weimar 1911

Page 50: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

Freud’s Inner Circle (1922)

Page 51: The Hysterical Self: Psychology in the Clinic. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) Inscribed to Freud, on the day Freud left the Salpêtrière Clinico-Anatomic.

“Hotel Log Hints at Illicit Desire That Dr. Freud Didn’t Repress”

Sigmund Freud with his wife, Martha Bernays Freud, center, and her sister, Minna Bernays, left, in 1929.

from New York Times December 24, 2006


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