舞蹈狂:作为一种社会现象的心理疾病。

Q3 Medicine Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience Pub Date : 2018-01-01 Epub Date: 2017-11-17 DOI:10.1159/000475719
Douglas J Lanska
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引用次数: 5

摘要

舞蹈狂热在14世纪黑死病之后爆发,并在中欧——尤其是德国、荷兰和比利时——反复出现了几个世纪,最终在17世纪初消退。“舞蹈狂躁”一词来源于“choreomania”,是choros(舞蹈)和mania(疯狂)的合成词。从15世纪到17世纪,一种变体tarantism在意大利南部盛行,当时被认为是狼蛛咬伤的结果。受影响的个体参与了持续的,长时间的,不稳定的,通常是疯狂的,有时是色情的舞蹈。在14世纪,这种舞蹈狂热与古代异教习俗对圣约翰节(St. John's Day)的破坏有关,但到了16世纪,它通常被认为是圣人派来的一种折磨,或者是上帝对人们罪恶的惩罚。因此,在14世纪和15世纪的爆发期间,舞蹈狂热被认为是治安官和牧师的问题,而不是医生的问题,尽管这种疾病被证明是难以对付的法令和驱魔。然而,在16世纪,帕拉塞尔苏斯不认为是圣徒导致或调停了舞蹈狂热的治疗;相反,他提出了一种心理原因或装病的病因,这种重新表述使舞蹈狂热进入了医生的范围。帕拉塞尔苏斯主张各种神秘的、心理的和药理学的方法,这取决于对个别病人的假定病因。只有音乐能缓解tarantism。后来的作者认为,舞蹈狂热是一种集体压力引起的精神病,一种集体心理疾病,一种文化决定的仪式化行为形式,一种宗教狂喜的表现,甚至是由麦角真菌的有毒和精神活性化学产物引起的食物中毒的结果。事实上,舞蹈狂热并不是单一的原因,而是可能包括心理疾病、装病和仪式化行为的组成部分。
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The Dancing Manias: Psychogenic Illness as a Social Phenomenon.

The dancing mania erupted in the 14th century in the wake of the Black Death, and recurred for centuries in central Europe - particularly Germany, the Netherlands, and Belgium - finally abating in the early 17th century. The term "dancing mania" was derived from "choreomania," a concatenation of choros (dance) and mania (madness). A variant, tarantism, was prevalent in southern Italy from the 15th to the 17th centuries, and was attributed at the time to bites from the tarantula spider. Affected individuals participated in continuous, prolonged, erratic, often frenzied and sometimes erotic, dancing. In the 14th century, the dancing mania was linked to a corruption of the festival of St. John's Day by ancient pagan customs, but by the 16th century it was commonly considered an ordeal sent by a saint, or a punishment from God for people's sins. Consequently, during outbreaks in the 14th and 15th centuries, the dancing mania was considered an issue for magistrates and priests, not physicians, even though the disorder proved intractable to decrees and exorcisms. However, in the 16th century Paracelsus discounted the idea that the saints caused or interceded in the cure of the dancing mania; he instead suggested a psychogenic or malingered etiology, and this reformulation brought the dancing mania within the purview of physicians. Paracelsus advocated various mystical, psychological, and pharmacological approaches, depending on the presumptive etiologic factors with individual patients. Only music provided any relief for tarantism. Later authors suggested that the dancing mania was a mass stress-induced psychosis, a mass psychogenic illness, a culturally determined form of ritualized behavior, a manifestation of religious ecstasy, or even the result of food poisoning caused by the toxic and psychoactive chemical products of ergot fungi. In reality, dancing manias did not have a single cause, but component causes likely included psychogenic illness, malingering, and ritualized behaviors.

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Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience
Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
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期刊介绍: Focusing on topics in the fields of both Neurosciences and Neurology, this series provides current and unique information in basic and clinical advances on the nervous system and its disorders.
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