Literature DB >> 32382404

Historicising stress: anguish and insomnia in the middle ages.

William MacLehose1.   

Abstract

While the concept of 'stress' in the modern sense is a twentieth-century innovation, many of the symptoms we associate with the modern condition appear in historical materials going back many centuries. But how did premodern people understand and experience these symptoms and their relation to sleep? This study focuses on the rich materials from the central middle ages in Western Europe, a period during which understandings of the body, mind, emotions and sleep were radically different from the present. It analyses two examples, nightmares and insomnia, disease categories which illustrate medieval views of the impact of worries and anguish on sleep. Medical and other sources identified a number of ways in which the mind and body interacted with one another in complex ways which disrupted the humoral and mental balance of the individual.
© 2020 The Author(s).

Entities:  

Keywords:  anxiety; insomnia; medieval; nightmares; psychosomatic; worry

Year:  2020        PMID: 32382404      PMCID: PMC7202388          DOI: 10.1098/rsfs.2019.0094

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Interface Focus        ISSN: 2042-8898            Impact factor:   3.906


  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

Review 2.  The pathological and the normal: Mapping the brain in medieval medicine.

Authors:  William MacLehose
Journal:  Prog Brain Res       Date:  2018-11-28       Impact factor: 2.453

Review 3.  Ventricular localization in late antiquity: The philosophical and theological roots of an enduring model of brain function.

Authors:  Jessica Wright
Journal:  Prog Brain Res       Date:  2018-11-24       Impact factor: 2.453

  3 in total

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