1824 | English poet Lord George Gordon Byron dies of malaria at age 36 while aiding Greek independence. | |
Volume 205, 2013, Pages 131–147
Literature, Neurology, and Neuroscience — Historical and Literary Connections
Chapter 7 – Lord Byron’s Physician: John William Polidori on SomnambulismAbstract
John
William Polidori (1795–1821) was the Edinburgh-trained physician hired
by Lord Byron to accompany him to Switzerland, where he participated in
the story-telling event proposed by Byron that led, with Polidori's
help, to Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. Although those interested in English literature might also remember Polidori as the author of The Vampyre,
one of the first extended works of fiction about vampires, his earlier
interest in somnambulism and trance states is only beginning to be
appreciated. Even more than students of Romantic literature, historians
of science and medicine seem little aware of what Polidori had written
about oneirodynia, a synonym for somnambulism, and how his
thoughts from 1815 about such activities reflected the changing medical
zeitgeist at this time. This chapter examines Polidori's medical thesis
in a neuroscience context and compares what he wrote to the writings of
several other physicians who were fascinated by nocturnal wanderings,
their causes, their manifestations, and their possible treatments.
Keywords
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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