Rewriting the Soul: Multiple Personality and the Sciences of Memory – Ian Hacking – 1995
Rewriting the Soul: Multiple Personality and the Sciences of Memory
Ian Hacking’s Rewriting the Soul examines the historical emergence of multiple personality disorder (now known as Dissociative Identity Disorder) during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The book doesn’t approach the subject from a clinical perspective seeking treatment or diagnosis, but rather as a philosophical and historical inquiry into how a particular understanding of the self – a unified, stable entity – came to be challenged and, ultimately, reconfigured by scientific and cultural forces. Hacking investigates the role of hypnotism, suggestion, and the changing conceptions of memory in the creation and popularization of this diagnosis.
Historical / Cultural Context
Published in 1995, Rewriting the Soul places the rise of multiple personality within a specific historical moment. Hacking argues that the condition was not simply *discovered* but was actively *created* through the interactions between patients, physicians, and the prevailing intellectual climate of the time. He details how the practices of early psychotherapists, particularly those employing hypnotic techniques, inadvertently elicited and shaped the symptoms of what would become known as multiple personality. The book highlights the influence of Victorian spiritualism, fascination with trance states, and the growing scientific interest in the subconscious mind. It importantly demonstrates how these cultural factors informed the medical understanding, and subsequently the experience, of the disorder.
Who This Book Is For
This work is ideally suited for readers with an interest in the history of psychology, the philosophy of mind, and the social construction of illness. It requires no prior knowledge of psychoanalysis or clinical psychology but will be most appreciated by those with some familiarity with the intellectual currents of the 19th and 20th centuries. The book is academically rigorous but written in a clear and engaging style, making it accessible to informed general readers. It doesn’t offer therapeutic insight, but rather a critical examination of how psychological categories themselves are formed.
Further Reading
- The Fabrication of Madness: Neurosis and the Social Pathology of Modern Life by Thomas Szasz: Another work challenging the medicalization of human experience.
- Studies in Hysteria by Sigmund Freud and Josef Breuer: A foundational text in psychoanalysis that, while differing in approach, explores related concepts of repressed memories and the unconscious.
- Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl: Examines the human will to meaning, relevant to the exploration of identity and self.
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