Rewriting the Soul: Multiple Personality and the Sciences of Memory
Hacking, Ian
Sold by Approximations, Ottawa, ON, Canada
AbeBooks Seller since April 3, 2024
Used - Hardcover
Condition: Used - Near fine
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSold by Approximations, Ottawa, ON, Canada
AbeBooks Seller since April 3, 2024
Condition: Used - Near fine
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketPurple cloth boards, white title and attributions (with a touch of gilt) to spine. Good corners and edges. Mild bumping/wrinkling to heel. Beige pastedowns and endpapers. Full number line to one. (ix)336pp. Complete jacket has light edge wear to few points. Covers shows "Double Portrait" by Hans von Marées.
Seller Inventory # ABE-1753055645275
Twenty-five years ago one could list by name the tiny number of multiple personalities recorded in the history of Western medicine, but today hundreds of people receive treatment for dissociative disorders in every sizable town in North America. Clinicians, backed by a grassroots movement of patients and therapists, find child sexual abuse to be the primary cause of the illness, while critics accuse the "MPD" community of fostering false memories of childhood trauma. Here the distinguished philosopher Ian Hacking uses the MPD epidemic and its links with the contemporary concept of child abuse to scrutinize today's moral and political climate, especially our power struggles about memory and our efforts to cope with psychological injuries.
What is it like to suffer from multiple personality? Most diagnosed patients are women: why does gender matter? How does defining an illness affect the behavior of those who suffer from it? And, more generally, how do systems of knowledge about kinds of people interact with the people who are known about? Answering these and similar questions, Hacking explores the development of the modern multiple personality movement. He then turns to a fascinating series of historical vignettes about an earlier wave of multiples, people who were diagnosed as new ways of thinking about memory emerged, particularly in France, toward the end of the nineteenth century. Fervently occupied with the study of hypnotism, hysteria, sleepwalking, and fugue, scientists of this period aimed to take the soul away from the religious sphere. What better way to do this than to make memory a surrogate for the soul and then subject it to empirical investigation?
Made possible by these nineteenth-century developments, the current outbreak of dissociative disorders is embedded in new political settings. Rewriting the Soul concludes with a powerful analysis linking historical and contemporary material in a fresh contribution to the archaeology of knowledge. As Foucault once identified a politics that centers on the body and another that classifies and organizes the human population, Hacking has now provided a masterful description of the politics of memory : the scientizing of the soul and the wounds it can receive.
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