This essay provides an exploration of the intertwining realms of psychiatry and literature, focusing particularly on the case of Fyodor Dostoevsky. The paper gives an overview of the interest in Dostoevsky’s opus and biography displayed by Italian psychiatry, in particular by Cesare Lombroso and the connection he made between genius and mental illness. The essay is divided into two parts: the first, more theoretical, aims to address the question of the osmosis between psychiatry and literature, paying particular attention to the fact that in the last twenty years of the nineteenth century this osmosis seems to have centred mainly around Dostoevsky. The first section delves into the theoretical underpinnings of this intersection, highlighting the influence of figures like Cesare Lombroso and the attraction Dostoevsky's works and biography held for psychiatrists and alienists. The second section examines Luigi Lugiato's unpublished study on Dostoevsky. Luigi Lugiato (1879-1950), an Italian psychiatrist and alienist, is a perfect example to demonstrate how thirty years following Lombroso's death and notwithstanding all the polemics and critiques surrounding his theories, his strong positivist paradigm continues to shape psychiatric analysis and remains influential in the European cultural panorama. The “law of contradiction”, observed in Dostoevsky's works and life, permeates Lugiato's own examination of the author.

Luigi Lugiato’s "Madmen, Deranged, Criminals": Dostoevsky and Italian Psychiatry after Cesare Lombroso / Ghidini, Maria Candida. - In: STUDIES IN EAST EUROPEAN THOUGHT. - ISSN 0925-9392. - (2024).

Luigi Lugiato’s "Madmen, Deranged, Criminals": Dostoevsky and Italian Psychiatry after Cesare Lombroso

Maria Candida Ghidini
2024-01-01

Abstract

This essay provides an exploration of the intertwining realms of psychiatry and literature, focusing particularly on the case of Fyodor Dostoevsky. The paper gives an overview of the interest in Dostoevsky’s opus and biography displayed by Italian psychiatry, in particular by Cesare Lombroso and the connection he made between genius and mental illness. The essay is divided into two parts: the first, more theoretical, aims to address the question of the osmosis between psychiatry and literature, paying particular attention to the fact that in the last twenty years of the nineteenth century this osmosis seems to have centred mainly around Dostoevsky. The first section delves into the theoretical underpinnings of this intersection, highlighting the influence of figures like Cesare Lombroso and the attraction Dostoevsky's works and biography held for psychiatrists and alienists. The second section examines Luigi Lugiato's unpublished study on Dostoevsky. Luigi Lugiato (1879-1950), an Italian psychiatrist and alienist, is a perfect example to demonstrate how thirty years following Lombroso's death and notwithstanding all the polemics and critiques surrounding his theories, his strong positivist paradigm continues to shape psychiatric analysis and remains influential in the European cultural panorama. The “law of contradiction”, observed in Dostoevsky's works and life, permeates Lugiato's own examination of the author.
2024
Luigi Lugiato’s "Madmen, Deranged, Criminals": Dostoevsky and Italian Psychiatry after Cesare Lombroso / Ghidini, Maria Candida. - In: STUDIES IN EAST EUROPEAN THOUGHT. - ISSN 0925-9392. - (2024).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11381/2975292
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