In 1908, Norwegian artist Edvard Munch—already famous for The Scream and other paintings showing sickness, despair, and suffering —put himself under the care of Dr. Daniel Jacobson, a nerve doctor in Copenhagen. Jacobson had previously attended some of Jean-Martin Charcot’s lectures in Paris, as had Knud Pontoppidan, his mentor. Munch, in turn, had long been showing signs and symptoms of an anxiety disorder and what might have been viewed as neurasthenia or hysteria. Now, he also seemed to be suffering from acute alcoholic toxicity. In this article, we explore Scandinavian psychiatry at the turn of the century; Jacobson and Pontoppidan’s connections to Paris; and how some of Munch’s treatments, most notably his electrotherapy sessions, related to therapeutics at La Salpêtrière. Additionally, various ways in which Munch learned about French medicine are examined. This material reveals how well-known and influential Charcot and his ideas about disorders of the brain and mind had become at the turn of the century, affecting not just the French physicians but also a world-famous artist and his nerve doctor in Scandinavia.
Edvard Munch’s crisis in 1908 and French medicine: His doctors, treatments, and sources of information / Finger, Stanley; Sirgiovanni, Elisabetta. - In: JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF THE NEUROSCIENCES. - ISSN 0964-704X. - (2024).
Edvard Munch’s crisis in 1908 and French medicine: His doctors, treatments, and sources of information
Elisabetta SirgiovanniSecondo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
2024
Abstract
In 1908, Norwegian artist Edvard Munch—already famous for The Scream and other paintings showing sickness, despair, and suffering —put himself under the care of Dr. Daniel Jacobson, a nerve doctor in Copenhagen. Jacobson had previously attended some of Jean-Martin Charcot’s lectures in Paris, as had Knud Pontoppidan, his mentor. Munch, in turn, had long been showing signs and symptoms of an anxiety disorder and what might have been viewed as neurasthenia or hysteria. Now, he also seemed to be suffering from acute alcoholic toxicity. In this article, we explore Scandinavian psychiatry at the turn of the century; Jacobson and Pontoppidan’s connections to Paris; and how some of Munch’s treatments, most notably his electrotherapy sessions, related to therapeutics at La Salpêtrière. Additionally, various ways in which Munch learned about French medicine are examined. This material reveals how well-known and influential Charcot and his ideas about disorders of the brain and mind had become at the turn of the century, affecting not just the French physicians but also a world-famous artist and his nerve doctor in Scandinavia.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.