Sleep Paralysis: Night-mares, Nocebos, and the Mind-Body Connection

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Rutgers University Press, 15.01.2011 - 182 Seiten
Sleep Paralysis explores a distinctive form of nocturnal fright: the "night-mare," or incubus. In its original meaning a night-mare was the nocturnal visit of an evil being that threatened to press the life out of its victim. Today, it is known as sleep paralysis-a state of consciousness between sleep and wakefulness, when you are unable to move or speak and may experience vivid and often frightening hallucinations. Culture, history, and biology intersect to produce this terrifying sleep phenomenon. Although a relatively common experience across cultures, it is rarely recognized or understood in the contemporary United States.

Shelley R. Adler's fifteen years of field and archival research focus on the ways in which night-mare attacks have been experienced and interpreted throughout history and across cultures and how, in a unique example of the effect of nocebo (placebo's evil twin), the combination of meaning and biology may result in sudden nocturnal death.
 

Inhalt

Introduction
1
Crosscultural Patterns
8
A Transhistorical Bestiary
37
3 The Nightmare on the Analysts Couch
59
4 The Nightmare in the Sleep Lab
74
5 The Nightmare Traditional Hmong Culture and Sudden Death
94
Beliefs That Harm
117
Conclusion
134
Notes
137
References
149
Index
165
About the Author
169
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Autoren-Profil (2011)

SHELLEY R. ADLER is a professor in the department of family and community medicine and director of education at the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

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