Dictionary Definition
hysteria
Noun
2 excessive or uncontrollable fear
3 neurotic disorder characterized by violent
emotional outbreaks and disturbances of sensory and motor functions
[syn: hysterical
neurosis]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
from hysteric + -ia < .Noun
- A mental disorder characterized by emotional excitability etc. without an organic cause.
- Behavior exhibiting excessive or uncontrollable emotion, such as fear or panic.
Translations
- German: Hysterie
- French: hystérie
- Icelandic: sefasýki , móðursýki , óhaminn æsingur , óhamin geðshræring
Extensive Definition
Hysteria, in its colloquial use, describes a
state of mind, one of
unmanageable fear or
emotional excesses. The
fear is often caused by multiple events in one's past that involved
some sort of severe conflict; the fear can be centered on a body
part or most commonly on an imagined problem with that body part
(disease is a common
complaint). People who are "hysterical" often lose self-control due
to the overwhelming fear.
Psychiatrists and other physicians have in theory
given up the use of "hysteria," replacing it with more euphemistic
terms that are essentially synonyms. These include "psychosomatic,"
"functional," "nonorganic," "psychogenic," and "medically
unexplained." In 1980 the
American Psychiatric Association officially changed the
diagnosis of “hysterical neurosis, conversion type” to “conversion
disorder.” Hysteria also has significant overlap with the
diagnostic term "somatization disorder" and with somatoform
disorders in general.
History
The term originates with the Greek medical term, hysterikos. This referred to a medical condition, thought to be particular to women, caused by disturbances of the uterus, hystera in Greek. The term hysteria was coined by Hippocrates, who thought that suffocation and madness arose in women whose uteri had become too light and dry from lack of sexual intercourse and, as a result, wandered upward, compressing the heart, lungs, and diaphragm.The same general definition, or under the name
female
hysteria, came into widespread use in the middle and late
19th
century to describe what is today generally considered to be
sexual
dissatisfaction. Typical treatment was massage of the patient's
genitalia by the physician and later vibrators
or water sprays to cause orgasm. particularly due to its
long list of possible manifestations: one Victorian physician
cataloged 75 pages of possible symptoms of hysteria and called the
list incomplete..
Current psychiatric terminology distinguishes two
types of hysteria: somatoform and dissociative. Dissociative
hysteria includes amnestic fugue states. Somatoform disorders
include conversion disorder, somatization disorder, chronic pain
disorder, hypochondriasis, and body dysmorphic disorder. In
somatoform disorders, the patient exhibits physical symptoms such
as low back pain or limb paralysis, without apparent physical
cause. Recent neuroscientific research, however, is starting to
show that there are characteristic patterns of brain activity
associated with these states. All these disorders are thought to be
unconscious, not feigned or intentional malingering.
Freudian psychoanalytic theory attributed
hysterical symptoms to the subconscious mind's attempt to protect
the patient from psychic stress. Subconscious motives include
primary gain, in which the symptom directly relieves the stress (as
when a patient coughs to release energy pent up from keeping a
secret), and secondary gain, in which the symptom provides an
independent advantage such as staying home from a hated job. More
recent critics have noted the possibility of tertiary gain, when a
patient is induced subconsciously to display a symptom because of
the desires of others (as when a controlling husband enjoys the
docility of his sick wife). There need be no gain at all, however,
in a hysterical symptom. A child playing hockey may fall and for
several hours believe he is unable to move, because he has recently
heard of a famous hockey player who fell and broke his neck.
Jungian
psychologist Laurie Layton Schapira explored what she labels a
"Cassandra
Complex" suffered by those traditionally diagnosed with
hysteria, denoting a tendency for those with hysteria to be
disbelieved or dismissed when relating the facticity of their
experiences to others. Based on clinical experience, she delineates
three factors which constitute the Cassandra complex in hysterics:
(a). dysfunctional relationships with social manifestations of
rationality, order, and reason, leading to; (b). emotional or
physical suffering, particularly in the form of somatic, often
gynaecological complaints, and (c). being disbelieved or dismissed
when attempting to relate the facticity of these experiences to
others.
Mass hysteria
The term also occurs in the phrase mass hysteria to describe mass public near-panic reactions. It is commonly applied to the waves of popular medical problems that "everyone gets" in response to news articles.A similar usage refers to any sort of "public
wave" phenomenon, and has been used to describe the periodic
widespread reappearance and public interest in UFO
reports, crop
circles, and similar examples. Also, when information, real or
fake, becomes misinterpreted but believed, e.g. penis
panic.
Hysteria is often associated with movements like
the Salem
Witch Trials, McCarthyism,
the First Red
Scare, the Second Red
Scare and Terrorism where
it is better understood through the related sociological term of
moral
panic.
See also
- Histrionic Personality Disorder
- Female hysteria
- Mass Control a very interesting book for those interested in psychology
References
- The H-Word, Guardian Unlimited, http://www.guardian.co.uk/weekend/story/0,3605,782338,00.html
- Halligan, P.W., Bass, C., & Marshall, J.C. (Eds.)(2001). Contemporary Approach to the Study of Hysteria: Clinical and Theoretical Perspectives. Oxford University Press, UK.
- Sander Gilman, Roy Porter, George Rousseau, Elaine Showalter, and Helen King (1993). Hysteria Before Freud (Berkeley, Los Angeles, and Oxford: University of California Press).
External links
hysteria in Arabic: هستيريا (مرض)
hysteria in Czech: Hysterie
hysteria in German: Hysterie
hysteria in Modern Greek (1453-): Υστερία
hysteria in Spanish: Histeria
hysteria in Esperanto: Histerio
hysteria in French: Hystérie
hysteria in Icelandic: Sefasýki
hysteria in Italian: Isteria
hysteria in Kurdish: Hîsterî
hysteria in Dutch: Hysterie
hysteria in Japanese: ヒステリー
hysteria in Norwegian: Hysteri
hysteria in Polish: Histeria
hysteria in Portuguese: Histeria
hysteria in Russian: Истерия
hysteria in Slovak: Hystéria
hysteria in Serbian: Хистерија
hysteria in Finnish: Hysteria
hysteria in Swedish: Hysteri
hysteria in Turkish: Histeri
hysteria in Chinese: 歇斯底里
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abandon, abstraction, abulia, accident neurosis,
alienation, anxiety, anxiety equivalent,
anxiety hysteria, anxiety neurosis, anxiety state, apathy, association neurosis,
battle fatigue, blast neurosis, catatonic stupor, combat fatigue,
compensation neurosis, compulsion, compulsion
neurosis, conversion hysteria, conversion neurosis, craze, dejection, delirium, depression, detachment, ecstasy, elation, emotionalism, euphoria, expectation neurosis,
fire and fury, fixation neurosis, folie du doute, frenzy, fright neurosis, furor, furore, fury, homosexual neurosis, hypochondria, hypochondriasis,
hysterics, indifference, insensibility, intoxication, lethargy, madness, mania, melancholia, mental
distress, neurosis,
neuroticism,
obsession, obsessional
neurosis, occupational neurosis, orgasm, orgy, passion, pathological
indecisiveness, pathoneurosis, phobia, preoccupation, psychalgia, psychasthenia, psychomotor
disturbance, psychoneurosis,
psychoneurotic disorder, psychopathia martialis, rage, rapture, ravishment, regression
neurosis, shell shock, situational neurosis, stupor, tearing passion, tic, towering rage, transport, twitching, unresponsiveness, war
neurosis, withdrawal