Abstract

Agoraphobia—literally fear of the agora, the Greek place of assembly or marketplace— emerged as a named disorder in 1871 and, from the start, stymied physicians who attempted to explain its cause. They found it difficult to explain why overwhelming anxiety overtook otherwise ‘sane’ individuals in particular settings. In this paper I argue that the affective nature of agoraphobic anxiety could neither be explained by nor captured within the accounts of space perception and representation put forward in the late-19th-century clinical literature. Those accounts relied on a ‘specular’ model in which the individual was able to represent to himself or herself that which he or she perceived; in contrast, the patients' experiences of overwhelming anxiety were characterized by a temporary loss of the symbolization of spatial relations and could not, therefore, be understood within a specular economy. I read late-19th-century attempts to account for agoraphobia, then, not as exemplars in a typology of ‘psy’ practices, but, rather, as a failure of the psy complex to map the spatial coordinates of agoraphobic anxiety adequately.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call