Abstract

Hergé’s “Adventures of Tintin” is a renowned Belgian comic book series. The twenty-four albums are rich in psychological and psychiatric elements, intricately woven into a smartly written and complex storyline. These elements have, however, seldom been studied systematically from a psychiatric point of view. In the current paper, we propose a systematic review of the series and of the medical literature concerning the psychiatric semiology and phenomenology found in the work of Hergé. The search terms used in the Pubmed database were “Tintin”, “medicine”, “medical”, “health”, “mental”, and “psychiatry”. Upon reading the integrality of the twenty-four albums, the most recurrent themes found were delusions and psychosis, personality disorders, and alcohol and other psychoactive substance use disorders. We then conduct a chronological analysis of the evolution of the representations of asylums and psychiatric hospitals, psychiatrists and the “mad man” throughout the albums. Finally, we present the psychoanalysis of the “Adventures of Tintin”, as developed by the psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Serge Tisseron, who, upon reading Hergé’s work, suspected the existence of a family secret that the author might have concealed in his albums.

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