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This article is about the state of mind. For other uses, see Hysteria (disambiguation).
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Hysteria is a diagnostic label applied to a state of mind, one of unmanageable fear or emotional excesses. The fear is often centered on a body part, most often 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.
Because of its association with female hysteria the term hysteria fell out of favor in the latter half of the 20th century. The word "hysterical" was replaced with synonyms such as functional, nonorganic, psychogenic and medically unexplained. In 1980 the American Psychiatric Association officially changed the diagnosis of “hysterical neurosis, conversion type” to “conversion disorder.” In that diagnostic manual the word "neurosis" was removed entirely for any conditions. The word "hysteria" is used in the popular press and in informal conversations.
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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.Rachel P. Maines (1999). The Technology of Orgasm: "Hysteria," the Vibrator, and Women\'s Sexual Satisfaction. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-6646-4. Typical treatment was massage of the patient\'s genitalia by the physician and later vibrators or water sprays to cause orgasm. By the early 1900s, the practice and usage of the term had fallen from use until it was again popularized when the writings of Sigmund Freud became known and influential in Britain and the USA in the 1920s. The Freudian psychoanalytic school of psychology uses its own, somewhat controversial, ways to treat hysteria.
The knowledge of hysterical processes was advanced by the work of Jean-Martin Charcot, a French neurologist. However, many now consider hysteria to be a legacy diagnosis (i.e., a catch-all junk diagnosis),Mark S. Micale (1993). "On the "Disappearance" of Hysteria: A Study in the Clinical Deconstruction of a Diagnosis". Isis 84: 496-526. 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.Laura Briggs (2000). "The Race of Hysteria: "Overcivilization" and the "Savage" Woman in Late Nineteenth-Century Obstetrics and Gynecology". American Quarterly 52: 246-73. .
Hysteria is NOT a Personality Disorder (Psychopathic in the UK, Sociopathic in the USA), it is a Neurosis (part of Mental Illness). There are 2 types of Hysteria: Dissociative, and Conversion. Dissociative Hysteria is when the patient exhibits such symptoms as amnesia, or multiple personality disorder - where the individual might have lots of distinct personalities, and switch between them at different times - (quite distinctly different to a Personality Disorder as detailed in DSM-iv (USA), or ICD-10 (rest of The World){International Classification of Disease -World Health Organisation}. Conversion Hysteria is when the patient exhibits PHYSICAL symptoms, like a bad back, glove and stocking paralysis, or some other bodily problem. In both cases, what has happened is that the subconscious mind has used one of 2 specialised Freudian Ego Mental Defence Mechanisms (Conversion or Dissociation) to protect the person\'s Ego from intolerable stress or intra-psychic conflict. In psychiatry, this is called the Primary Gain, and is totally subconscious.
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.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia