• For their first release, rightly named Mass Hysteria, Spiritual Cramp relates this state of unease in a seemingly at ease system. (deathwishinc.com)
  • Mass hysteria may occur within cohesive groups that share information. (smallwarsjournal.com)
  • The strategic aims of this information operation go beyond the fanciful symptoms often seen in mass hysteria and instead capitalize on the fixed false belief that motivates behavior in this state. (smallwarsjournal.com)
  • The source of anxiety manipulated to induce mass hysteria is social, cultural, and political issues, which have pre-existing high levels of emotional valence. (smallwarsjournal.com)
  • A goal of mass hysteria is to create societal disequilibrium, which creates conditions favorable to revolution. (smallwarsjournal.com)
  • A total of 10 doctors across across four JAMA letters say that researchers - particularly via a study published in JAMA this past March - gave unduly short shrift to the possibility that embassy employees suffered instead from mass hysteria. (axios.com)
  • One of the doctors who questioned their findings, for example, has previously identified 'a preponderance of female participants' as a characteristic of mass hysteria. (axios.com)
  • Mass hysteria among South African primary school learners in Kwa-Dukuza, KwaZulu-Natal. (who.int)
  • In the 5th century BCE Hippocrates first used the term hysteria. (wikipedia.org)
  • The term hysteria is no longer used in psychiatry and psychopathology, but 'hysterical' is used in colloquial language to describe someone who is hot-headed, impulsive or has violent outbursts. (lu.se)
  • Many influential people such as Sigmund Freud and Jean-Martin Charcot dedicated research to hysteria patients. (wikipedia.org)
  • Hysteria follows the early career of Sigmund Freud, from his training in neurological research to his establishment of a therapeutic practice in Vienna. (selfmadehero.com)
  • Drawing on the case histories of 'Anna O.', Fräulein Elisabeth von R. and others, Hysteria shows Freud and his contemporaries developing ideas that would transform the intellectual landscape of the Western world. (selfmadehero.com)
  • This is a masterful visual guide to the strange and fascinating characters that populate Freud and Breuer's Studies in Hysteria , the founding text of psychoanalysis. (selfmadehero.com)
  • For SelfMadeHero, he adapted the texts for the Manga Shakespeare series, as well as The Wolf Man and Hysteria in the Graphic Freud series. (selfmadehero.com)
  • He collaborated with Richard Appignanesi on Dr Faustus , Hysteria , Introducing Freud and Introducing Existentialism . (selfmadehero.com)
  • Hippocrates (460-357 BC), the father of medicine, gave hysteria its name. (lu.se)
  • Therefore, it is also shown that hysteria in psychoanalysis is different from common sense, which understands hysteria as a change of emotions, out of control and shouting. (bvsalud.org)
  • Furthermore, lifestyle choices, such as choosing not to wed, are no longer considered symptoms of psychological disorders such as hysteria. (wikipedia.org)
  • Instead, the ancient Romans credited hysteria to a disease of the womb or a disruption in reproduction (i.e., a miscarriage, menopause, etc. (wikipedia.org)
  • B Raman believes any confrontation as a result of this hysteria would damage the interests of both countries. (rediff.com)
  • Currently, most doctors practicing medicine do not accept hysteria as a medical diagnosis. (wikipedia.org)
  • The blanket diagnosis of hysteria has been fragmented into myriad medical categories such as epilepsy, histrionic personality disorder, conversion disorders, dissociative disorders, or other medical conditions. (wikipedia.org)
  • The use of "hysteria" in the media and by public health authorities can be problematic, since this terminology i s controversial, including for its sexist connotation , and is no longer used as a medical diagnosis. (who.int)
  • Boss LP. Epidemic Hysteria: A Review of the Published Literature. (who.int)
  • What can we learn form the textual traditions of hysteria about writing the history of disease in general? (princeton.edu)
  • Rape Culture Hysteria: Fixing the Damage Done to Men and Women offers a comprehensive overview and debunking of the "rape culture" myth that has devastated campuses and is spilling into Main Street America. (ncfm.org)
  • The oldest record of hysteria dates back to 1900 BCE when Egyptians recorded behavioral abnormalities in adult women on the Kahun Papyrus. (wikipedia.org)
  • Plato and Aristotle believed that hysteria, which Plato also called female madness, was directly related to these women's lack of sexual activity and described the uterus as those who suffered from it as having a sad, bad, or melancholic uterus. (wikipedia.org)
  • At this time, writings such as Constantine the African's Viaticum and Pantegni, described women with hysteria as the cause of amor heroycus, a form of sexual desire so strong that it caused madness, rather than someone with a problem who should be cured. (wikipedia.org)
  • Hysteria over China has reached the point of collective madness. (forexfactory.com)
  • Hysteria is a term used colloquially to mean ungovernable emotional excess and can refer to a temporary state of mind or emotion. (wikipedia.org)
  • Hysteria in men, on the other hand, was believed to be a form of burnout. (lu.se)
  • Interior Minister Aleksandar Vulin, who is known for his pro-Russia and anti-Western stance, said he told Lavrov during their meeting that "Serbia is the only state in Europe that didn't introduce sanctions and was not part of the anti-Russian hysteria. (ktar.com)
  • A dangerous hysteria has taken hold of India-China relations since the anti-Beijing uprising in Lhasa in March last year. (rediff.com)
  • Hysteria' arrives just a year after her striking, minimalist debut, Echo. (piccadillyrecords.com)
  • Doctors in London treat cases of hysteria, characterized at the time by a woman's irritability, anger, or unexplained tears, with a new electrical device for treatment for the ailment. (widescreenreview.com)
  • I love the British band's High 'N' Dry and Pyromania albums but Hysteria was a huge shock to my system when it came out in 1987 and it took me a long time to fully appreciate that album. (sleazeroxx.com)
  • What I did not realize is that during the band's Las Vegas stint where Hysteria was played in its entirety, the opening band was the best Def Leppard cover band of all time - Ded Flatbird - which was essentially the band members impersonating themselves through their alter egos. (sleazeroxx.com)
  • Between the fifth and thirteenth centuries, however, the increasing influence of Christianity in the Latin West altered medical and public understanding of hysteria. (wikipedia.org)
  • But public policy founded on hysteria runs a risk of trampling the most basic rights. (bostonglobe.com)
  • He reconstructs in detail the past usages of the hysteria concept as a powerful, descriptive trope in various nonmedical domains, including poetry, fiction, theater, social thought, political criticism, and the arts His book is a pioneering attempt to write the historical phenomenology of disease in an age preoccupied with health, and a prescriptive remedy for writing histories of disease in the future. (princeton.edu)
  • Honesty is likely to make a greater and more lasting impression on our children than political posturing and hysteria. (stopthedrugwar.org)
  • With the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692 as a moral frame and point of departure, Mr. Miller has gone on to examine the permanent conditions of the climate of hysteria. (upenn.edu)
  • One of the many ironies of post- Dobbs hysteria was French President Emmanuel Macron denouncing the decision, even though the Mississippi statute that the Court upheld was more permissive, more liberal, than France's own abortion law. (powerlineblog.com)
  • There has been a little bit of hysteria, post Brexit vote," Obama said. (politico.eu)
  • Even though I surprisingly consider the show that I saw from Def Leppard 's 'Hysteria Tour' as one of the top concerts that I have ever seen (perhaps a future Retro Concert Review should be in the works), I have routinely looked down upon the Hysteria album and anything after that, and never saw the band in concert again. (sleazeroxx.com)
  • Rural extended families demonstrated a high incidence of hypochondria and hysteria. (cdc.gov)
  • In the nineteenth century, female hysteria was considered a diagnosable physical illness in women. (wikipedia.org)
  • The process of developing the history of Siouxland's version of collegiate "Hoops Hysteria" came about with a thought. (morningside.edu)
  • Hysteria theories from the ancient Egyptians, ancient Greeks, and ancient Romans were the basis of the Western understanding of hysteria. (wikipedia.org)
  • For there, in gory Technicolor, the hysteria and intolerance of Hacked Off was on full display. (spiked-online.com)
  • If Echo bore the mark of producer Adrianne Lenker's intimate, spectral approach, then Hysteria is comparatively full-bodied and warm like a raging fire, as Dessner's ornate instrumentation perfectly compliment Sparke's songwriting. (piccadillyrecords.com)
  • She prescribed remedies such as mint for women suffering from hysteria. (wikipedia.org)
  • She believed that men and women were both responsible for original sin, and could both suffer from hysteria. (wikipedia.org)
  • As governments and markets around the world work to make sense of Britain's vote last week to leave the European Union, President Barack Obama dismissed the global reaction to the seismic move as "hysteria. (politico.eu)
  • Furthermore, during the Renaissance period many patients of hysteria were prosecuted as witches and underwent interrogations, torture, exorcisms, and execution. (wikipedia.org)