Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Fear and Loathing and Los Lobos

A few weeks ago all the cool blogs were posting about the Werewolf Delusion. It is a Hallowe'en tradition. We totally could have joined in but we decided to wait for the Oglaf linkage:

The story would have us accept that the lycanthropy of Classical and Mediaeval folklore is a culture-specific manifestation of a mental illness, inflicting people with the subjective experience of transformation into a wolf -- or some other animal associated with danger and power -- which they take for real.
The authors believe that this is because of what different cultures associate with...evil. Many of the people with lycanthropy believed firmly that the devil had done this to them, and of course the devil would turn them into a beast that is usually considered EVIL. Like wolves, which have been associated with Satan since the middle ages, or snakes, which go all the way back to Genesis [...]. So the authors suggest that the idea of werewolves might arise from people suffering from lycanthropy, and believing that they had been transformed into the evil thing which they most feared.
Believing? Not real? Go argue with the Library Pixies and try explaining this subjective-experience theory to them. Also Boing Boing stole our woodcut.
I know that movie
Of course our immediate response at the Riddled Scriptwriting Workshop was to begin work on the pilot episode of Zoanthropy Psychiatrist. Each week's episode would bring another form of animal-themed psychotic delusion for the protagonist to cure with the help of sympathetic listening, a deep understanding of every crevice of the human psyche, and heroic doses of Thorazine.

Wacky hijinks are sure to ensue when you consider all the possibilities, conveniently available in review papers!
Precisely what is so evil or menacing about gerbils remains to be seen. At least one unaccountable omission** from the list comes to mind. Also they didn't mention cows:
 
Or zombie dogs:
Sadly, the script must remain on the back-burner along with last night's leftover curry that no-one wants. For despite a flurry of last-minute lobbying (or whatever the appropriate collective term might be*), there is no sign that the next release of the DSM will recognise zoanthropy or Theriomorphic Personality Disorder as a specific psychiatric category, or anything more than a symptom of some syndrome on which other specialists already have dibs.


If only there were a psychiatric label for the delusion that one is transforming into Santa Claus, to provide the same blogs with a theme for Christmas posts.

We are left wondering why the Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica has become the go-to- journal for so many of these case studies. It is as if the Scandiwegians had a cultural tradition of skinwalking.
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* What is the correct collective term for a group of collectives?

** The story has a happy ending!

9 comments:

mikey said...

Gentlemen, Gentlemen, PLEASE.

We are far too civilized around here to use such coarse and insulting terms as "Cotard".

I'd suggest you go with the much more inclusive "Assistant Challenged".

Thank you. Do carry on...

Hamish Mack said...

What are Metallica going to do now that Lars has turned into Father Christmas? Sorry, forgot, the same ole fucking thing.

Smut Clyde said...

Another victim of Santafication Syndrome!

zombie rotten mcdonald said...

Will the wolf survive?

What are Metallica going to do now that Lars has turned into Father Christmas?

EVERYBODY IS GOING TO FIND A SUBPOENA IN THEIR STOCKING.

Substance McGravitas said...

Each week's episode would bring another form of animal-themed psychotic delusion

My god is the sloth episode ever boring.

fish said...

Weresnake just doesn't have the same cache.

Also too, penis.

Substance McGravitas said...

PEDANT CLEANUP ON POST 358261923216796234

Smut Clyde said...

INITIATING CACHET PURGE

Smut Clyde said...

There's a weresnake transformation in Charles Williams' "The Place of the Lion" near the end of Chapter 12. Ends badly.