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Disturbed Mind-body Connections in Shakespeare Characters Print E-mail
SciMed - Horizons
TS-Si News Service   
Saturday, 26 November 2011 04:00
Laurence Olivier as King Lear.North Somerset, UK. Many modern day doctors would do well to study Shakespeare to better understand the mind-body connection, concludes an analysis of his works.

Kenneth W. Heaton, a medical doctor and extensively published author on William Shakespeare's oeuvre, systematically analysed 42 of the author's major works and 46 of those of his contemporaries.


Dr. Heaton was looking for evidence of psychosomatic symptoms, since The bard was a master at portraying profound emotional upset in the physical symptoms of his characters. The researcher focused on sensory symptoms other than those relating to sight, taste, the heart, and the gut. His findings appear in the journal Medical Humanities.

Kenneth W. Heaton, MD, says his findings should encourage doctors to remember that physical symptoms can have psychological causes.

"Many doctors are reluctant to attribute physical symptoms to emotional disturbance, and this results in delayed diagnosis, overinvestigation, and inappropriate treatment."

"They could learn to be better doctors by studying Shakespeare. This is important because the so-called functional symptoms are the leading cause of general practitioner visits and of referrals to specialists," he says.
Shakespeare's portrayal of symptoms such as dizziness/faintness, and blunted or heightened sensitivity to touch and pain in characters expressing profound emotions, was significantly more common than in works by other authors of the time.
  • Vertigo/giddiness/dizziness is expressed by five male characters in Taming of the Shrew, Romeo and Juliet, Henry VI part 1, Cymbeline and Troilus and Cressida. The nearest approximation in a work by one of his contemporaries was a single incident in The Malcontent by John Marston.

  • There are at least 11 instances of breathlessness associated with extreme emotion in Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Rape of Lucrece, Venus and Adonis, and Troilus and Cressida, compared with just two in the works of other writers.

  • Fatigue/weariness as a result of grief or distress is a familiar sensation among Shakespeare's characters, most notably in Hamlet, The Merchant of Venice, As You Like It, Richard II and Henry IV part 2. This crops up twice as frequently as in other contemporaries' works, argues Dr Heaton.

  • Disturbed hearing at a time of high emotion occurs in King Lear, Richard II and King John while blunted/exaggerated senses are portrayed in Much Ado about Nothing, Venus and Adonis, King Lear, Love's Labour's Lost and Coriolanus.

"Shakespeare's perception that numbness and enhanced sensation can have a psychological origin seems not to have been shared by his contemporaries, none of whom included such phenomena in the works examined," writes Dr Heaton.

  • The Bard also uses coldness - for example, Romeo and Juliet - and faintness to convey shock, including in Titus Andronicus, Julius Caesar, Love's Labour's Lost, and Richard III, significantly more frequently than other writers of the period.

Dr Heaton concludes that his data show that Shakespeare "was an exceptionally body-conscious writer," suggesting that the technique was used to make his characters seem more human and engender greater empathy or raise the emotional temperature of his plays and poems.

CitationBody-conscious Shakespeare: sensory disturbances in troubled characters. Kenneth W. Heaton. Medical Humanities 2011; 37: 97-102. doi:10.1136/jmh.2010.006643

Abstract

It is widely accepted that Shakespeare was unique in the range of his insights into the human mind, but the way his characters reveal their mental states through bodily sensations has not been systematically explored. The author has searched for these phenomena in the 42 major works of Shakespeare and in 46 genre-matched works by his contemporaries, and in this paper the author focuses on sensory changes other than those involving vision, taste, the heart and the alimentary tract (all considered in other papers). Vertigo is experienced by five distressed Shakespearean characters, all men, but not at all by the other writers' characters. Breathlessness, probably representing hyperventilation, occurs eleven times in Shakespeare's works but only twice in the other writers' works. Fatigue, expressing grief, is articulated by several Shakespearean characters including Hamlet. It features less often in the others' works. Deafness at a time of high emotion is mentioned by Shakespeare several times but usually by a character ‘turning a deaf ear’, consciously or unconsciously. To the other writers, ears show emotion only by burning or itching. Blunting of touch and pain and their opposites of hypersensitivity to touch and pain are all to be found in Shakespeare's works when a character is distressed or excited, but not so with his contemporaries' works. Faint feelings and cold feelings are also more common in the works of Shakespeare. Overall, therefore, Shakespeare was exceptional in his use of sensory disturbances to express emotional upset. This may be a conscious literary device or a sign of exceptional awareness of bodily sensations.

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Last Updated on Friday, 25 November 2011 22:18