mesmerism and hawthorne

             Mesmerism and the Patterns Witnessed throughout Hawthorne's works
             Nathaniel Hawthorne's short stories and novels are laden with Mesmeristic Imagery. He incorporates Mesmerism to add an element of the supernatural to his works. Also, Mesmerism depicts a power struggle between a man and a woman. The man acts as Mesmerizer and knowingly takes advantage of the woman for deceitful purposes. Mesmerism and it's root, animal magnetism, are incorporated throughout Hawthorne's short stories and novels.
             Franz Anton Mesmer (1734-1815), an Austrian physicist, was a pioneer in the practice of Hypnotism. His theory began as animal magnetism. Mesmer believed a mysterious fluid penetrates all bodies. This fluid allows one person to have a powerful "magnetic" influence over another. His sessions of seances, in which he magnetized patients, created an initial sensation but soon the medical profession considered him a fraud. His theories of animal magnetism have been discarded , but hypnotism has been accepted as a subject for scientific study as well as a means of treating certain disorders (World Book 421).
             Mesmer was not the first to use magnets to heal wounds. In all ages and all countries there have been people who have claimed to have such power. But, these healings were based on the spiritual power of the healers themselves. Mesmer was the first to believe that this healing power was purely a question of matter and motion: all spirituality was removed (Podmore40).
             Animal magnetism began as a treatment for physical maladies. Mesmer believed that the earth and celestial bodies, rotating in the midst of universal fluid, continually generated electricity. This electricity was modified according to the nature of the receiver. Mesmer believed the human body was the most perfect electric machine in the world(Podmore75). A well man fell ill when his channel to the universal fluid became obstructed. The anima...

More Essays:

APA     MLA     Chicago
mesmerism and hawthorne . (1969, December 31). In MegaEssays.com. Retrieved 23:02, November 24, 2024, from https://www.megaessays.com/viewpaper/68676.html