The Puerto Rican Syndrome
By (Author) Patricia Gherovici
Other Press LLC
Other Press LLC
17th November 2003
United States
General
Non Fiction
Anthropology
Psychiatry
616.89
Paperback
320
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 18mm
439g
During the 1950s, US Army medical officers noted a new and puzzling syndrome that contemporary psychiatry could not explain nor cure. These doctors reported that Puerto Rican soldiers under stress behaved in a very peculiar and dramatic manner, exhibiting a theatrical form of pseudo-epilepsy. Startled physicians observed frightened and disoriented patients foaming at the mouth, screaming, biting, kicking, shaking in seizures and fainting. The phenomenon seemed to correspond to a serious neurological disease yet, as with some forms of hysteria, physical examination failed to identify any sign of an organic origin. This unusual set of symptoms, entered into medical records as a "a group of striking psychopathological reaction patterns, precipitated by minor stress", was designated "Puerto Rican Syndrome". In this work, Patricia Gherovici examines the so-called Puerto Rican Syndrome in the contemporary world, its social and cultural implications for the growing Hispanic population in the US and, therefore, for the US as a whole. As a mental illness that is, allegedly, uniquely Puerto Rican, this syndrome links nationality and culture to a psychiatric disease whose reappearance recalls the spectacular hysteria that led to the discovery of the unconscious and the birth of psychoanalysis. Gherovici uses the combined insights of Freud and Lacan to examine the current state of psychoanalysis and the Hispanic community in America. Blending these insights with history, current events and her own case material, Gherovici provides a fresh look at the Puerto Rican Syndrome as social and cultural phenomenon. She aims to shed new light on the future of American society and argues that psychoanalysis is not only possible, but much needed in the ghetto.
Patricia Gherovici Patricia Gherovici is an analyst in private practice and founding member and director of the Philadelphia Lacan Study Group and Seminar. She has published in numerous journals and collections, most recently Where Id Was- Challenging Normalization in Psychoanalysis (Continuum- 2001). She is the former director of a mental health clinic in Philadelphia.