Memoirs of My Nervous Illness (New York Review Books Classics)

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Description

In 1884, the distinguished German jurist Daniel Paul Schreber suffered the first of a series of mental collapses that would afflict him for the rest of his life. In his madness, the world was revealed to him as an enormous architecture of nerves, dominated by a predatory God. It became clear to Schreber that his personal crisis was implicated in what he called a “crisis in God’s realm,” one that had transformed the rest of humanity into a race of fantasms. There was only one treatment; as his doctor noted: Schreber “considered himself chosen to redeem the world, and to restore to it the lost state of Blessedness. This, alternatively, he could only do by first being transformed from a man into a woman….”
Daniel Paul Schreber began Memoirs of my Nervous Illness in February 1900 at the same time as confined in an asylum, as part of an appeal for release. Schreber, second son (the first committed suicide) of an abusive father, was at the peak of a brilliant career in Leipzig when he was appointed Presiding Judge of the Saxon High Court of Appeals. Alas, the stress of his new job proved too much for him, and before long he was hearing voices and feeling suicidal. Within weeks he was committed, having abruptly descended into madness, and was placed under the care of Dr. Paul Emil Flechsig. From the start, Schreber struggled to make sense of what he was seeing and hearing, and actually Memoirs is so lucid and self-aware, so internally consistent and insightful, that he was released on its strength. Still, reading this man’s prose is a lesson in subjective reality, by turns funny and terrifying.

I existed often without a stomach…. In relation to any other human being this would have resulted in natural pus formation with an inevitably fatal outcome; but the food pulp could not damage my body because all impure matter in it was soaked up again by the rays.

As Christianity alone could not provide an explanation for what appeared to be happening to him, Schreber pieced together a complex theology involving a divided God with dark and light incarnations, whose “rays” and “nerves” interacted in various ways with humans. God was also his personal tormentor, in league with Flechsig to commit “soul-murder” by manipulating his nerves. Further, Schreber believed that he was being literally “unmanned” so that God could sexually violate him and conceive a new human race: “But as soon as I am alone with God … I must continually or at least at certain times strive to give divine rays the impression of a woman in the height of sexual delight…”

Schreber had a hard time believing in the “fleeting-improvised-men” who flitted in and out of his life, and grew convinced that he was the only human left in a world of shadows. But he did know that something was wrong. He would hear the birds in the asylum’s garden ask him, over and over, “Are you not ashamed?” And he was aware that his bellowing, banging on the piano, and other bodily manifestations of God’s manipulation of his nerves (or “miracles”) were startling to others, to say the least. Many of Schreber’s delusions had to do with escaping his body–the constant babble of thousands of voices in his head were infuriating, as was his inability to cease thinking:

The sound which reaches my own ear–hundreds of times every day–is so definite that it cannot be a hallucination. The genuine “cries of help” are all the time instantly followed by the phrase which has been learnt by rote: “If only the cursed cries of help would stop.”

Memoirs of My Nervous Illness succeeds on many levels: as a memoir, as imaginative literature, and as a serious work of mythology. Flechsig makes a menacing and inscrutable villain, representing materialistic thinking and conventional reality–no help at all. Schreber, meanwhile, is the classic hero, struggling to stay sane in a cruel and capricious universe. –Therese Littleton

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