Literature DB >> 24162746

Sleepwalking, violence and desire in the middle ages.

William MacLehose1.   

Abstract

This study discusses the phenomenon of medieval sleepwalking as a disorder of body and soul. In the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries, medical and natural philosophical writers began to identify the category of the sleepwalker with unusual precision: the most common example of the disorder involved an aristocrat who rose, armed himself, and mounted his horse, all the while imagining that he was fighting enemies or hunting deer. Explanations for this extraordinary behaviour involved the physiology of sleep and the functioning of the brain. In particular, theorists believed that the imagination, a storehouse of images located towards the front of the brain, took control because reason and sensation had been disabled during sleep. As a consequence, daytime fears and traumas could come to the fore for some sleepers, causing them to act and react in their sleep in ways they could not, or were not willing to do, in their waking, rational state. As such, medieval medical writers viewed sleepwalking as a dangerous, disordered state which called into question the Aristotelian divide between waking and sleeping as well as the categories of reason, sensation and voluntary motion.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24162746     DOI: 10.1007/s11013-013-9344-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry        ISSN: 0165-005X


  3 in total

1.  Sleep we have lost: pre-industrial slumber in the British Isles.

Authors:  A R Ekirch
Journal:  Am Hist Rev       Date:  2001

2.  The diagnostic dream in ancient medical theory and practice.

Authors:  S M Oberhelman
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  1987       Impact factor: 1.314

3.  Galen, On Diagnosis from Dreams.

Authors:  S M Oberhelman
Journal:  J Hist Med Allied Sci       Date:  1983-01       Impact factor: 2.088

  3 in total
  2 in total

1.  Accounting for sleep loss in early modern England.

Authors:  Sasha Handley
Journal:  Interface Focus       Date:  2020-04-17       Impact factor: 3.906

2.  The Noctambuli: tales of sleepwalkers and secrets of the body in seventeenth-century England.

Authors:  Elizabeth Hunter
Journal:  Seventeenth Century       Date:  2020-12-17
  2 in total

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