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Sleepwalking through History: Medicine,Arts, and Courts of Law
Authors:Sharda Umanath  Daniel Sarezky
Institution:1. Department of Psychology and Neuroscience , Duke University , Durham, NC, USA;2. Feinberg School of Medicine , Northwestern University , Chicago, IL, USA
Abstract:Somnambulism, or sleepwalking, has always been of interest to theologians, writers, philosophers, physicians, and others fascinated by unusual behaviors. This parasomnia, which was defined less precisely in the past than it is today, has long been featured in medical dissertations and books of medicine. Further, Shakespeare, Bellini, and Brown, among others, incorporated it into their plays, operas, and novels. Because some somnambulists turned violent and committed other acts detrimental to society, sleepwalking also demanded attention from legal systems, and guidelines were set for whether somnambulists could be held responsible for their actions. This historical review focuses on these developments pertaining to somnambulism through the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries.
Keywords:artificial somnambulism  Bellini  Brown (Charles Brockden)  Byron  Darwin (Erasmus)  Dreaming  Hammond  Macbeth  Mesmer  Mesmerism  Müller (Johannes)  Polidori  Prichard  Shakespeare  sleepwalking  somnambulism  Wienholt
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