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Daniel Paul Schreber

Daniel Paul Schreber (German: [ˈʃʀeːbɐ]; 25 July 1842 – 14 April 1911) was a German judge who was famous for his personal account of his own experience with schizophrenia. Schreber experienced three distinct periods of acute mental illness. The first of these, in 1884-1885 was what was then diagnosed as dementia praecox (later known as paranoid schizophrenia or schizophrenia, paranoid type). He described his second mental illness, from 1893 to 1902, making also a brief reference to the first disorder from 1884 to 1885, in his book Memoirs of My Nervous Illness (German: Denkwürdigkeiten eines Nervenkranken).[1][non-primary source needed] The Memoirs became an influential book in the history of psychiatry and psychoanalysis because of its interpretation by Sigmund Freud.[2] There is no personal account of his third disorder, in 1907–1911, but some details about it can be found in the Hospital Chart (in the Appendix to Lothane's book). During his second illness he was treated by Paul Flechsig (Leipzig University Clinic), Pierson (Lindenhof), and Guido Weber (Royal Public Asylum, Sonnenstein).[not verified in body]

Daniel Paul Schreber
Born(1842-07-25)25 July 1842
Leipzig, Saxony, Germany
Died14 April 1911(1911-04-14) (aged 68)
Leipzig, Saxony, Germany
Education
OccupationJudge
Known forPsychosis
Notable workMemoirs of My Nervous Illness
Parent

Early life, education, and career edit

Schreber was born on 25 July 1842 in Leipzig, Germany, the second oldest of five children of physician Daniel Gottlieb Moritz Schreber (1808-1861) and Louise Henrietta Pauline Haase (1815-1907). His paternal great-grandfather was Daniel Gottfried Schreber. Throughout his life, his family suffered from various mental illnesses: his father experienced lifelong depression and his older brother committed suicide in 1877.[3]

Schreber graduated from St. Thomas School in 1860, began work as a judge for the Ministry of Justice in 1867, and received a doctorate in jurisprudence from University of Leipzig in 1869. He married Ottilie Sabine Behr (1857-1912) in 1878.[4]

Schizophrenia edit

Timeline edit

In 1884, Schreber ran for Reichstag and lost. This had a negative effect on his mental health, causing him to enter an asylum for six months.[3] He was treated by psychiatrist Paul Flechsig and left "completely recovered", returning to work in 1886.[5] In October 1893, Schreber became presiding judge of an Oberlandesgericht court and his wife had a stillbirth.[3][4] He shortly readmitted himself to Fleschsig's clinic seeking treatment for insomnia. His condition worsened in the following years and he was eventually transferred to Sonnenstein Castle.[3] By 1899 he entered remission and was deemed "capable of meeting the demands of everyday life", though still confident in his schizophrenic delusions.[5] He wrote his memoir a year later. Schreber took legal action to be released and won in 1902, but was re-institutionalised in 1907 after his mother died and his wife had a stroke. Schreber died on 14 April 1911 in the Leipzig-Dosen asylum.[6]

Experiences edit

Schreber woke up one morning with the thought that it would be pleasant to "succumb" to sexual intercourse as a woman. He was alarmed and felt that this thought had come from somewhere else, not from himself. He even hypothesized that the thought had come from a doctor who had experimented with hypnosis on him; he thought that the doctor had telepathically invaded his mind. He believed his primary psychiatrist, Paul Flechsig, had contact with him using a "nerve-language" of which Schreber said humans are unaware. He believed that hundreds of people's souls took special interest in him, and contacted his nerves by using "divine rays", telling him special information, or requesting things of him. During one of his stays at the Sonnenstein asylum, he concluded that there are "fleeting-improvised-men" in the world, which he believed were divinely fabricated men, as miracles to provide Schreber with "play-with-humans" in light of a depopulation of the world.[7][page needed]

As his psychosis progressed, he believed that God was turning him into a woman, sending rays down to enact 'miracles' upon him, including little men to torture him. Schreber was released from psychiatric hospitals around 1902, shortly before the publication of his book.[5]

Worldview edit

The fundamental unit of Schreber's ruminations were what he called "nerves", which were said to compose both the human soul and the nature of God in relation to humanity. Each human soul was composed of nerves that derived from God, whose own nerves were then the ultimate source of human existence. Schreber's thought that God's nerves and those of humanity existed parallel to one another except when the "Order of the World" was violated which constituted the fundamental premise of Schreber's memoirs, in which the two universes experienced dangerous "nerve-contact" with each other. For Schreber, this was focused upon his personal and institutional relationship with Flechsig, who became a rebellious "nerve specialist" by virtue of his psychiatric power in contrast to the "Omnipotence" of God.

The peculiar universe of Schreber's was mediated by the activity of rays, which could assume a "pure" and "impure" relation; these rays could be controlled by Flechsig or emanated strictly from God, who sought to influence Schreber and his reality by "divine miracles". The rays had the capacity for independent activity, though they were distinguished from souls and nerves (generally identical) which emanated from other human beings deceased or living. Within Schreber's cosmology the universe as an observable reality, and the Sun especially, was a partially independent realm which God merely communicated through, using rays and miracles to influence at times when the "Order of the World" needed to be adjusted. Strictly speaking, God only initiated nerve-contact with human beings through dreams or inspired states (in poetry, etc.), or when humans had become corpses and returned to the "forecourts of Heaven" after purification to rejoin the 'nerve soul' of God. However, the entire crisis which Schreber describes in his book is the dangerous combination between humanity and God within the mind of Schreber.

Schreber's ruminations can be schematized in this way:

  • God - Upper and lower (Ormuzd and Ahriman respectively, derived from Persian theology)
  • The "forecourts of Heaven" - The "states of Blessedness" where deceased humans' souls reside after a process of "purification" (These are called the "anterior realms of God" in contradistinction to the "posterior" realms which consist of the upper and lower Gods)
  • The Universe - Separated from the transcendental sphere of God providing the human/material world and yet threatening God's invested existence within it; celestial bodies allow the means for God's life/light to interact with His creations
  • Divine rays - Semi-sentient entities (which are the cosmic fuel of God's Omnipotence, and influence Schreber and the world but can be manipulated by Flechsig)
  • Nerves/Souls - The spiritual bodies of humans which are active whether the living person is alive or dead, and go through various states of purification in order to return to God's nerves in a "state of Blessedness"

There is no Hell in Schreber's cosmology.

Interpretations edit

Freud edit

Although Sigmund Freud never interviewed Schreber himself, he read his Memoirs and drew his own conclusions from it in an essay entitled "Psycho-Analytic Notes on an Autobiographical Account of a Case of Paranoia (Dementia Paranoides)" (1911). Freud thought that Schreber's disturbances resulted from repressed homosexual desires, which in infancy were oriented at his father and brother. Repressed inner drives were projected onto the outside world and led to intense hallucinations which were first centred on his physician Flechsig (projection of his feelings towards his brother), and then around God (who represented Schreber's father, Daniel Gottlob Moritz Schreber). During the first phase of his illness Schreber was certain that Flechsig persecuted him and made direct attempts to murder his soul and change him into a woman (he had what Freud thought to be emasculation hallucinations, which were in fact, according to Schreber's words an "unmanning" (Entmannung) experience. In the next period of his ailment he was convinced that God and the order of things demanded of him that he must be turned into a woman so that he could be the sole object of sexual desire of God. Consideration of the Schreber case led Freud to revise received classification of mental disturbances. He argued that the difference between paranoia and dementia praecox is not at all clear, since symptoms of both ailments may be combined in any proportion, as in Schreber's case. Therefore, Freud concluded, it may be necessary to introduce a new diagnostic notion: paranoid dementia, which does justice to polymorphous mental disturbances such as those exhibited by the judge.

Criticism edit

Freud's interpretation has been contested by a number of subsequent theorists, most notably Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in their work Anti-Oedipus and elsewhere. Their reading of Schreber's Memoirs is a part of their wider criticism of familial orientation of psychoanalysis and it foregrounds the political and racial elements of the text; they see Schreber's written experience of reality abnormal only in its honesty about the experience of power in late capitalism. Elias Canetti also devoted the closing chapters of his theoretical magnum opus Crowds and Power to a reading of Schreber. Finally, Jacques Lacan's Seminar on the Psychoses and one of his écrits "On a Question Prior to Any Possible Treatment of Psychosis" are predominantly concerned with reading and evaluating Schreber's text over-against Freud's original and originating interpretation.

Schatzman edit

In 1974, Morton Schatzman published Soul Murder, in which he gave his own interpretation of Schreber's psychosis. Schatzman's interpretation was based on W. G. Niederland's research from the 1950s. (Niederland had previously worked with survivors of Nazi concentration camps.)[8] Schatzman had found child-rearing pamphlets written by Moritz Schreber, Daniel Schreber's father, which stressed the necessity of taming the rebellious savage beast in the child and turning him into a productive citizen. Many of the techniques recommended by Moritz Schreber were mirrored in Daniel Schreber's psychotic experiences. For example, one of the "miracles" described by Daniel Schreber was that of chest compression, of tightening and tightening. This can be seen as analogous to one of Moritz Schreber's techniques of using an elaborate contraption that confined the child's body, forcing him to have a "correct" posture at the dinner table. Similarly, the "freezing miracle" might mirror Moritz Schreber's recommendation of placing the infant in a bath of ice cubes beginning at age three months. Daniel Paul Schreber's older brother, Daniel Gustav Schreber, committed suicide in his thirties. In his 1989 book Schreber: Father and Son, Han Israëls argued against the interpretations of Niederland and Schatzman, claiming that Schreber's father had been unfairly criticized in the literature.[9]

Lothane edit

Henry Zvi Lothane argued against the interpretations of Niederland and Schatzman in his 1992 book, In Defense of Schreber: Soul Murder and Psychiatry.[10] Lothane's Schreber research included the study of archival records concerning the relationship between Schreber and the other significant people in his life, including his wife and his doctors. On Lothane's account, the existing literature on Schreber as a rule (1) leaves substantial gaps in the historical records, which careful archival research could in some measure fill, (2) leaves out psychoanalytically significant relationships, such as that between Schreber and his wife, and (3) overstates the purportedly sadistic elements in Schreber's father's child-rearing techniques.[11] Lothane's interpretation of Schreber also differs from previous texts in that he considers Schreber a worthwhile thinker.[12]

In popular culture edit

  • Schreber's Memoirs are the starting point and main topic of the 1972 radio play Schreber's Nervous Illness by British playwright Caryl Churchill.
  • Roberto Calasso's first book, and only novel, L'impuro folle (1974), is about Schreber.
  • A character of the same name appears in the 1988 book Empire of the Senseless by Kathy Acker.
  • A character of the same name appears in the 1998 film Dark City, played by Kiefer Sutherland.
  • In the 2006 film Memoirs of My Nervous Illness, based on Schreber's 1903 journal of the same name, Schreber is portrayed by Jefferson Mays.
  • The 2011 docudrama film, Shock Head Soul follows Schreber's demise and later life.
  • Schreber is the first person narrator of Swedish writer Fabian Kastner's novel Lekmannen (The Layman, 2013).
  • In Jenny Davidson's The Magic Circle: A Novel (2013), Lucy uses Memoirs of My Nervous Illness as a text for the seminar she is teaching on "Madness and Literature."
  • The song "Dementia Praecox" from the 2014 album White Deer Park by Papa vs Pretty is about Daniel Paul Schreber.
  • Schreber is the subject of British writer Alex Pheby's novel Playthings, (2015).
  • BBC documents record that Anthony Burgess wrote in 1975 for Burt Lancaster a screenplay of Schreber's Memoir. Never filmed, it was adapted for radio and performed by Christopher Eccleston 22 March 2020.
  • The two dominant organizations in the anime franchise Neon Genesis Evangelion are named NERV and SEELE, German for Nerve and Soul, likely alluding to Schreber's cosmology.[13]

References edit

  1. ^ Schreber, Daniel Paul (1903). Memoirs of My Nervous Illness. New York: New York Review of Books, 2000. ISBN 0-940322-20-X.
  2. ^ Freud, Sigmund (1911). The Schreber Case. Translated by Webber, Andrew. Introduction by MacCabe, Colin. New York: Penguin Classics Psychology, 2003. ISBN 0-14-243742-5.
  3. ^ a b c d Waude, Adam (21 April 2016). "Inside the Mind of Daniel Schreber". www.psychologistworld.com. Retrieved 26 September 2023.
  4. ^ a b Lothane, Zvi. "Schreber, Daniel Paul (1842-1911)". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 27 September 2023.
  5. ^ a b c McGlashan, T. H. (30 March 2009). "Psychosis as a Disorder of Reduced Cathectic Capacity: Freud's Analysis of the Schreber Case Revisited". Schizophrenia Bulletin. 35 (3): 476–481. doi:10.1093/schbul/sbp019. ISSN 0586-7614. PMC 2669588. PMID 19357240.
  6. ^ Berry, Philippa; Wernick, Andrew (1992). Shadow of Spirit: Postmodernism and Religion. Routledge. p. 248. ISBN 978-0-415-06638-9.
  7. ^ Schreber, Daniel Paul (1903). Memoirs of My Nervous Illness. New York: New York Review of Books, 2000. ISBN 978-0-940322-20-2.
  8. ^ Niederland, W. G. "Schreber: Father and Son". Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 28 Apr. 1959 (2), 151-169.
  9. ^ Israëls, Han (1989) [1981]. Schreber: Father and Son. Madison: International Universities Press.
  10. ^ Lothane, Z. (1992). In Defense of Schreber: Soul Murder and Psychiatry. Hillsdale, NJ/London: The Analytic Press. Second, German edition, Lothane, Z. (2004). Seelenmord und Psychiatrie Zur Rehabilitierung Schrebers. Giessen: Psychosozial-Verlag. (2nd edition of In Defense of Schreber)
  11. ^ Lothane, Z. (1992). In Defense of Schreber: Soul Murder and Psychiatry. Hillsdale, NJ/London: The Analytic Press.
  12. ^ Lothane, Z. (2011). The teachings of honorary professor of psychiatry Daniel Paul Schreber, J.D., to psychiatrists and psychoanalysts, or dramatology's challenge to psychiatry and psychoanalysis. Psychoanalytic Review, 98(6): 775-815.
  13. ^ Malone, Paul (2007). "My Own Private Apocalypse: Shinji Ikari as Schreberian Paranoid Superhero in Hideaki Anno's Neon Genesis Evangelion". In Wendy Haslem, Angela Ndalianis and Chris Mackie (ed.). Super/Heroes: From Hercules to Superman. New Academia Publishing. pp. 111–26.

Further reading edit

  • David B. Allison et al., "Psychosis and Sexual Identity: Toward a Post-Analytic View of the Schreber Case" (ISBN 0-88706-617-8): State University of New York Press, Albany, NY, 1988. A collection of essays by theorists such as Michel de Certeau, Alphonso Lingis, Jean-François Lyotard, as well as several previously unpublished texts written by Schreber after the publication of the Memoirs.
  • Elias Canetti: Crowds and Power: New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux: 1984.
  • Thomas Dalzell: Freud's Schreber: Between Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis: London: Karmec: 2011.
  • Han Israëls: Schreber: Father and Son: Madison: International Universities Press: 1989 [1981]. Translated by H. S. Lake from the Dutch Schreber: Vader en Zoon: Historisch-kritische opmerkingen over een psychoanalytisch beschreven geval van paranoia.
  • Erin Labbie & Michael Uebel: "We Have Never Been Schreber: Paranoia, Medieval and Modern," in The Legitimacy of the Middle Ages: On the Unwritten History of Theory. Ed. Andrew Cole & D. Vance Smith. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2010. 127–58.
  • Jacques Lacan: 'The Psychoses: The Seminar of Jacques Lacan Book III, 1955-56', Routledge (ISBN 0-415-10183-2). An analysis of Schreber's Memoirs in the context of Freud's analysis. "[P]sychosis is a special but emblematic case of language entrapment."
  • Jacques Lacan: 'On a Question Prior to Any Possible Treatment of Psychosis', Écrits: The First Complete Edition in English, transl. by Bruce Fink, New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2006.
  • William G. Niederland: The Schreber Case: Psychoanalytic Profile of a Paranoid Personality: New York: Quadrangle: 1974.
  • Eric Santner: My Own Private Germany: Daniel Paul Schreber's Secret History of Modernity (ISBN 0-691-02627-0) Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1996.
  • Louis Sass: The Paradoxes of Delusion: Wittgenstein, Schreber, and the Schizophrenic Mind (ISBN 0801498996) Cornell University Press: 1994.
  • Morton Schatzman: Soul Murder: Persecution in the Family (ISBN 0-394-48148-8) Random House, New York, 1973.
  • Anke Junk: Macht und Wirkung eines Mythos - die mythenhaften Vorstellungen des Daniel Paul Schreber. Hannover, Impr. Henner Junk 2004. OCLC 1122576567
  • Alexander van der Haven: "The War and Transcendental Order: Critique of Violence in Benjamin, Canetti and Daniel Paul Schreber" in Tel Aviver Jahrbuch für deutsche Geschichte 43 (2015): 115–144.
  • Alexander van der Haven: "God as Hypothesis: Daniel Paul Schreber and the Study of Religion" in Method and Theory in the Study of Religion: Working Papers from Hannover. Supplements to Method and Theory in the Study of Religion 8. Ed. Steffen Führding. Leiden/Boston: Brill, 2017. 176–98.
  • Alexander van der Haven: "Beyond the Modern Self: Madness and Divine Communion in fin-de-siècle Germany" in Religion und Wahnsinn um 1900: Zwischen Pathologisierung und Selbstermächtigung. Religion and Madness Around 1900: Between Pathology and Self-Empowerment. Diskurs Religion: Beiträge zur Religionsgeschichte und religiösen Zeitgeschichte 14. Ed. Lutz Greisiger, Sebastian Schüler, Alexander van der Haven. Baden-Baden: Ergon, 2017. 69–100.
  • Peter Goodrich, Katrin Trüstedt (eds.): Laws of Transgression. The Return of Judge Schreber. (ISBN 978-1-48750-915-6) University of Toronto Press, Toronto/Buffalo/London, 2022.

External links edit

  • Saxon Psychiatric Museum collected documents about life history of the court president Daniel Paul Schreber.
  • Daniel Paul Schreber: A Guide to Memoirs of My Nervous Illness. An introduction to Schreber's work.

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This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations September 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Daniel Paul Schreber German ˈʃʀeːbɐ 25 July 1842 14 April 1911 was a German judge who was famous for his personal account of his own experience with schizophrenia Schreber experienced three distinct periods of acute mental illness The first of these in 1884 1885 was what was then diagnosed as dementia praecox later known as paranoid schizophrenia or schizophrenia paranoid type He described his second mental illness from 1893 to 1902 making also a brief reference to the first disorder from 1884 to 1885 in his book Memoirs of My Nervous Illness German Denkwurdigkeiten eines Nervenkranken 1 non primary source needed The Memoirs became an influential book in the history of psychiatry and psychoanalysis because of its interpretation by Sigmund Freud 2 There is no personal account of his third disorder in 1907 1911 but some details about it can be found in the Hospital Chart in the Appendix to Lothane s book During his second illness he was treated by Paul Flechsig Leipzig University Clinic Pierson Lindenhof and Guido Weber Royal Public Asylum Sonnenstein not verified in body Daniel Paul SchreberBorn 1842 07 25 25 July 1842Leipzig Saxony GermanyDied14 April 1911 1911 04 14 aged 68 Leipzig Saxony GermanyEducationSt Thomas School LeipzigUniversity of LeipzigOccupationJudgeKnown forPsychosisNotable workMemoirs of My Nervous IllnessParentMoritz Schreber father Contents 1 Early life education and career 2 Schizophrenia 2 1 Timeline 2 2 Experiences 2 3 Worldview 3 Interpretations 3 1 Freud 3 1 1 Criticism 3 2 Schatzman 3 3 Lothane 4 In popular culture 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEarly life education and career editSchreber was born on 25 July 1842 in Leipzig Germany the second oldest of five children of physician Daniel Gottlieb Moritz Schreber 1808 1861 and Louise Henrietta Pauline Haase 1815 1907 His paternal great grandfather was Daniel Gottfried Schreber Throughout his life his family suffered from various mental illnesses his father experienced lifelong depression and his older brother committed suicide in 1877 3 Schreber graduated from St Thomas School in 1860 began work as a judge for the Ministry of Justice in 1867 and received a doctorate in jurisprudence from University of Leipzig in 1869 He married Ottilie Sabine Behr 1857 1912 in 1878 4 Schizophrenia editTimeline edit In 1884 Schreber ran for Reichstag and lost This had a negative effect on his mental health causing him to enter an asylum for six months 3 He was treated by psychiatrist Paul Flechsig and left completely recovered returning to work in 1886 5 In October 1893 Schreber became presiding judge of an Oberlandesgericht court and his wife had a stillbirth 3 4 He shortly readmitted himself to Fleschsig s clinic seeking treatment for insomnia His condition worsened in the following years and he was eventually transferred to Sonnenstein Castle 3 By 1899 he entered remission and was deemed capable of meeting the demands of everyday life though still confident in his schizophrenic delusions 5 He wrote his memoir a year later Schreber took legal action to be released and won in 1902 but was re institutionalised in 1907 after his mother died and his wife had a stroke Schreber died on 14 April 1911 in the Leipzig Dosen asylum 6 Experiences edit Schreber woke up one morning with the thought that it would be pleasant to succumb to sexual intercourse as a woman He was alarmed and felt that this thought had come from somewhere else not from himself He even hypothesized that the thought had come from a doctor who had experimented with hypnosis on him he thought that the doctor had telepathically invaded his mind He believed his primary psychiatrist Paul Flechsig had contact with him using a nerve language of which Schreber said humans are unaware He believed that hundreds of people s souls took special interest in him and contacted his nerves by using divine rays telling him special information or requesting things of him During one of his stays at the Sonnenstein asylum he concluded that there are fleeting improvised men in the world which he believed were divinely fabricated men as miracles to provide Schreber with play with humans in light of a depopulation of the world 7 page needed As his psychosis progressed he believed that God was turning him into a woman sending rays down to enact miracles upon him including little men to torture him Schreber was released from psychiatric hospitals around 1902 shortly before the publication of his book 5 Worldview edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Daniel Paul Schreber news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The fundamental unit of Schreber s ruminations were what he called nerves which were said to compose both the human soul and the nature of God in relation to humanity Each human soul was composed of nerves that derived from God whose own nerves were then the ultimate source of human existence Schreber s thought that God s nerves and those of humanity existed parallel to one another except when the Order of the World was violated which constituted the fundamental premise of Schreber s memoirs in which the two universes experienced dangerous nerve contact with each other For Schreber this was focused upon his personal and institutional relationship with Flechsig who became a rebellious nerve specialist by virtue of his psychiatric power in contrast to the Omnipotence of God The peculiar universe of Schreber s was mediated by the activity of rays which could assume a pure and impure relation these rays could be controlled by Flechsig or emanated strictly from God who sought to influence Schreber and his reality by divine miracles The rays had the capacity for independent activity though they were distinguished from souls and nerves generally identical which emanated from other human beings deceased or living Within Schreber s cosmology the universe as an observable reality and the Sun especially was a partially independent realm which God merely communicated through using rays and miracles to influence at times when the Order of the World needed to be adjusted Strictly speaking God only initiated nerve contact with human beings through dreams or inspired states in poetry etc or when humans had become corpses and returned to the forecourts of Heaven after purification to rejoin the nerve soul of God However the entire crisis which Schreber describes in his book is the dangerous combination between humanity and God within the mind of Schreber Schreber s ruminations can be schematized in this way God Upper and lower Ormuzd and Ahriman respectively derived from Persian theology The forecourts of Heaven The states of Blessedness where deceased humans souls reside after a process of purification These are called the anterior realms of God in contradistinction to the posterior realms which consist of the upper and lower Gods The Universe Separated from the transcendental sphere of God providing the human material world and yet threatening God s invested existence within it celestial bodies allow the means for God s life light to interact with His creations Divine rays Semi sentient entities which are the cosmic fuel of God s Omnipotence and influence Schreber and the world but can be manipulated by Flechsig Nerves Souls The spiritual bodies of humans which are active whether the living person is alive or dead and go through various states of purification in order to return to God s nerves in a state of Blessedness There is no Hell in Schreber s cosmology Interpretations editFreud edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Although Sigmund Freud never interviewed Schreber himself he read his Memoirs and drew his own conclusions from it in an essay entitled Psycho Analytic Notes on an Autobiographical Account of a Case of Paranoia Dementia Paranoides 1911 Freud thought that Schreber s disturbances resulted from repressed homosexual desires which in infancy were oriented at his father and brother Repressed inner drives were projected onto the outside world and led to intense hallucinations which were first centred on his physician Flechsig projection of his feelings towards his brother and then around God who represented Schreber s father Daniel Gottlob Moritz Schreber During the first phase of his illness Schreber was certain that Flechsig persecuted him and made direct attempts to murder his soul and change him into a woman he had what Freud thought to be emasculation hallucinations which were in fact according to Schreber s words an unmanning Entmannung experience In the next period of his ailment he was convinced that God and the order of things demanded of him that he must be turned into a woman so that he could be the sole object of sexual desire of God Consideration of the Schreber case led Freud to revise received classification of mental disturbances He argued that the difference between paranoia and dementia praecox is not at all clear since symptoms of both ailments may be combined in any proportion as in Schreber s case Therefore Freud concluded it may be necessary to introduce a new diagnostic notion paranoid dementia which does justice to polymorphous mental disturbances such as those exhibited by the judge Criticism edit Freud s interpretation has been contested by a number of subsequent theorists most notably Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari in their work Anti Oedipus and elsewhere Their reading of Schreber s Memoirs is a part of their wider criticism of familial orientation of psychoanalysis and it foregrounds the political and racial elements of the text they see Schreber s written experience of reality abnormal only in its honesty about the experience of power in late capitalism Elias Canetti also devoted the closing chapters of his theoretical magnum opus Crowds and Power to a reading of Schreber Finally Jacques Lacan s Seminar on the Psychoses and one of his ecrits On a Question Prior to Any Possible Treatment of Psychosis are predominantly concerned with reading and evaluating Schreber s text over against Freud s original and originating interpretation Schatzman edit In 1974 Morton Schatzman published Soul Murder in which he gave his own interpretation of Schreber s psychosis Schatzman s interpretation was based on W G Niederland s research from the 1950s Niederland had previously worked with survivors of Nazi concentration camps 8 Schatzman had found child rearing pamphlets written by Moritz Schreber Daniel Schreber s father which stressed the necessity of taming the rebellious savage beast in the child and turning him into a productive citizen Many of the techniques recommended by Moritz Schreber were mirrored in Daniel Schreber s psychotic experiences For example one of the miracles described by Daniel Schreber was that of chest compression of tightening and tightening This can be seen as analogous to one of Moritz Schreber s techniques of using an elaborate contraption that confined the child s body forcing him to have a correct posture at the dinner table Similarly the freezing miracle might mirror Moritz Schreber s recommendation of placing the infant in a bath of ice cubes beginning at age three months Daniel Paul Schreber s older brother Daniel Gustav Schreber committed suicide in his thirties In his 1989 book Schreber Father and Son Han Israels argued against the interpretations of Niederland and Schatzman claiming that Schreber s father had been unfairly criticized in the literature 9 Lothane edit Henry Zvi Lothane argued against the interpretations of Niederland and Schatzman in his 1992 book In Defense of Schreber Soul Murder and Psychiatry 10 Lothane s Schreber research included the study of archival records concerning the relationship between Schreber and the other significant people in his life including his wife and his doctors On Lothane s account the existing literature on Schreber as a rule 1 leaves substantial gaps in the historical records which careful archival research could in some measure fill 2 leaves out psychoanalytically significant relationships such as that between Schreber and his wife and 3 overstates the purportedly sadistic elements in Schreber s father s child rearing techniques 11 Lothane s interpretation of Schreber also differs from previous texts in that he considers Schreber a worthwhile thinker 12 In popular culture editSchreber s Memoirs are the starting point and main topic of the 1972 radio play Schreber s Nervous Illness by British playwright Caryl Churchill Roberto Calasso s first book and only novel L impuro folle 1974 is about Schreber A character of the same name appears in the 1988 book Empire of the Senseless by Kathy Acker A character of the same name appears in the 1998 film Dark City played by Kiefer Sutherland In the 2006 film Memoirs of My Nervous Illness based on Schreber s 1903 journal of the same name Schreber is portrayed by Jefferson Mays The 2011 docudrama film Shock Head Soul follows Schreber s demise and later life Schreber is the first person narrator of Swedish writer Fabian Kastner s novel Lekmannen The Layman 2013 In Jenny Davidson s The Magic Circle A Novel 2013 Lucy uses Memoirs of My Nervous Illness as a text for the seminar she is teaching on Madness and Literature The song Dementia Praecox from the 2014 album White Deer Park by Papa vs Pretty is about Daniel Paul Schreber Schreber is the subject of British writer Alex Pheby s novel Playthings 2015 BBC documents record that Anthony Burgess wrote in 1975 for Burt Lancaster a screenplay of Schreber s Memoir Never filmed it was adapted for radio and performed by Christopher Eccleston 22 March 2020 The two dominant organizations in the anime franchise Neon Genesis Evangelion are named NERV and SEELE German for Nerve and Soul likely alluding to Schreber s cosmology 13 References edit Schreber Daniel Paul 1903 Memoirs of My Nervous Illness New York New York Review of Books 2000 ISBN 0 940322 20 X Freud Sigmund 1911 The Schreber Case Translated by Webber Andrew Introduction by MacCabe Colin New York Penguin Classics Psychology 2003 ISBN 0 14 243742 5 a b c d Waude Adam 21 April 2016 Inside the Mind of Daniel Schreber www psychologistworld com Retrieved 26 September 2023 a b Lothane Zvi Schreber Daniel Paul 1842 1911 Encyclopedia com Retrieved 27 September 2023 a b c McGlashan T H 30 March 2009 Psychosis as a Disorder of Reduced Cathectic Capacity Freud s Analysis of the Schreber Case Revisited Schizophrenia Bulletin 35 3 476 481 doi 10 1093 schbul sbp019 ISSN 0586 7614 PMC 2669588 PMID 19357240 Berry Philippa Wernick Andrew 1992 Shadow of Spirit Postmodernism and Religion Routledge p 248 ISBN 978 0 415 06638 9 Schreber Daniel Paul 1903 Memoirs of My Nervous Illness New York New York Review of Books 2000 ISBN 978 0 940322 20 2 Niederland W G Schreber Father and Son Psychoanalytic Quarterly 28 Apr 1959 2 151 169 Israels Han 1989 1981 Schreber Father and Son Madison International Universities Press Lothane Z 1992 In Defense of Schreber Soul Murder and Psychiatry Hillsdale NJ London The Analytic Press Second German edition Lothane Z 2004 Seelenmord und Psychiatrie Zur Rehabilitierung Schrebers Giessen Psychosozial Verlag 2nd edition of In Defense of Schreber Lothane Z 1992 In Defense of Schreber Soul Murder and Psychiatry Hillsdale NJ London The Analytic Press Lothane Z 2011 The teachings of honorary professor of psychiatry Daniel Paul Schreber J D to psychiatrists and psychoanalysts or dramatology s challenge to psychiatry and psychoanalysis Psychoanalytic Review 98 6 775 815 Malone Paul 2007 My Own Private Apocalypse Shinji Ikari as Schreberian Paranoid Superhero in Hideaki Anno s Neon Genesis Evangelion In Wendy Haslem Angela Ndalianis and Chris Mackie ed Super Heroes From Hercules to Superman New Academia Publishing pp 111 26 Further reading editDavid B Allison et al Psychosis and Sexual Identity Toward a Post Analytic View of the Schreber Case ISBN 0 88706 617 8 State University of New York Press Albany NY 1988 A collection of essays by theorists such as Michel de Certeau Alphonso Lingis Jean Francois Lyotard as well as several previously unpublished texts written by Schreber after the publication of the Memoirs Elias Canetti Crowds and Power New York Farrar Straus and Giroux 1984 Thomas Dalzell Freud s Schreber Between Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis London Karmec 2011 Han Israels Schreber Father and Son Madison International Universities Press 1989 1981 Translated by H S Lake from the Dutch Schreber Vader en Zoon Historisch kritische opmerkingen over een psychoanalytisch beschreven geval van paranoia Erin Labbie amp Michael Uebel We Have Never Been Schreber Paranoia Medieval and Modern in The Legitimacy of the Middle Ages On the Unwritten History of Theory Ed Andrew Cole amp D Vance Smith Durham NC Duke University Press 2010 127 58 Jacques Lacan The Psychoses The Seminar of Jacques Lacan Book III 1955 56 Routledge ISBN 0 415 10183 2 An analysis of Schreber s Memoirs in the context of Freud s analysis P sychosis is a special but emblematic case of language entrapment Jacques Lacan On a Question Prior to Any Possible Treatment of Psychosis Ecrits The First Complete Edition in English transl by Bruce Fink New York W W Norton amp Co 2006 William G Niederland The Schreber Case Psychoanalytic Profile of a Paranoid Personality New York Quadrangle 1974 Eric Santner My Own Private Germany Daniel Paul Schreber s Secret History of Modernity ISBN 0 691 02627 0 Princeton University Press Princeton NJ 1996 Louis Sass The Paradoxes of Delusion Wittgenstein Schreber and the Schizophrenic Mind ISBN 0801498996 Cornell University Press 1994 Morton Schatzman Soul Murder Persecution in the Family ISBN 0 394 48148 8 Random House New York 1973 Anke Junk Macht und Wirkung eines Mythos die mythenhaften Vorstellungen des Daniel Paul Schreber Hannover Impr Henner Junk 2004 OCLC 1122576567 Alexander van der Haven The War and Transcendental Order Critique of Violence in Benjamin Canetti and Daniel Paul Schreber in Tel Aviver Jahrbuch fur deutsche Geschichte 43 2015 115 144 Alexander van der Haven God as Hypothesis Daniel Paul Schreber and the Study of Religion in Method and Theory in the Study of Religion Working Papers from Hannover Supplements to Method and Theory in the Study of Religion 8 Ed Steffen Fuhrding Leiden Boston Brill 2017 176 98 Alexander van der Haven Beyond the Modern Self Madness and Divine Communion in fin de siecle Germany in Religion und Wahnsinn um 1900 Zwischen Pathologisierung und Selbstermachtigung Religion and Madness Around 1900 Between Pathology and Self Empowerment Diskurs Religion Beitrage zur Religionsgeschichte und religiosen Zeitgeschichte 14 Ed Lutz Greisiger Sebastian Schuler Alexander van der Haven Baden Baden Ergon 2017 69 100 Peter Goodrich Katrin Trustedt eds Laws of Transgression The Return of Judge Schreber ISBN 978 1 48750 915 6 University of Toronto Press Toronto Buffalo London 2022 External links editSaxon Psychiatric Museum collected documents about life history of the court president Daniel Paul Schreber Daniel Paul Schreber A Guide to Memoirs of My Nervous Illness An introduction to Schreber s work Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Daniel Paul Schreber amp oldid 1214103311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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