Hurt/comfort bingo

Jun 18, 2016 21:55

hc_bingo is open again! I'm so tempted to sign up; it's always been my favorite bingo, and it's also been a while since I wrote any fanfic, so maybe it would get me going again ( Read more... )

writing, hc_bingo

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rachelmanija June 20 2016, 01:03:39 UTC
No, unfortunately. I might be able to answer specific questions, though. The problem with a lot of medical history is that typically stuff was known about but not widely, or not actually practiced, so knowing when something was invented won't tell you if people were actually using it or aware of it.

In general, however, that is before psychiatry became a thing - like, Freud was in college around then.

This might be helpful, for search terms if nothing else: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Da_Costa%27s_syndrome

So, PTSD was sort of known but thought to be more physical. However (I have an essay on this I can link you to) people may have also had the general concept of "bad experiences can change people" but not a name for it.

Lincoln had what we would call depression and what would most commonly be known as melancholia: http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2005/10/lincolns-great-depression/304247/

prayer and going to Arizona are the state of the art depression treatments these days.

Still are in some circles. In general, yeah, actually, prayer, maybe some weird cure-all medicines, and sometimes a better climate were state of the art for most things back then.

You might also enjoy the (hilarious and gross) podcast Sawbones, about medical history and how awful most early medicine was.

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osprey_archer June 20 2016, 03:45:08 UTC
If the story were set just a few years later, I would use the term neurasthenia, but unfortunately it wasn't popularized until the 1870s so that's right out. Probably melancholia will work just as well - actually it might be more accessible to a general reader, now that I think about it.

I've also thought about having the characters discuss it in terms of a loss of faith, because that seems to be the other big language that people in the nineteenth century used to discuss mental/spiritual crisis. But I'm a bit chary of having a romance novel suddenly get bogged down in "Well I was brought up a Unitarian but then the war happened and I realized Jonathan Edwards was right, we are sinners in the hand of an angry God and there is no reason on earth why he shouldn't let all our worthless souls burn, and then I fell into the slough of despond."

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rachelmanija June 20 2016, 03:58:02 UTC
You can also have them say they keep remembering the soldiers who died and it still makes them sad. Or if it started earlier, maybe they had several relatives who also had it and their family thinks it runs in the family, like red hair or such. That's ahead of its time as a general concept, but people did notice genetic tendencies way before we had actual genetics. Like, "That family has a lo of wild boys," or "She's smart like her mother."

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