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Freud’s muse: Searching for the real ‘Anna O’

- SUSANNAH CAHALAN

Bertha Pappenheim stopped eating and sleeping. She lost her language and ability to move. Her eyes crossed and her muscles spasmed. She suffered, her doctors said, from the prevailing diagnosis afflicting primarily well-todo women in fin de siecle Vienna: hysteria. What this meant was and is a source of debate: Did her facial paralysis emerge from a biological condition? Was her intermitte­nt deafness psychologi­cal — or something more metaphysic­al?

Her physician, Josef Breuer, taken with the engaging and beautiful young woman, began visiting her daily. Sometimes Pappenheim made up fairy tales, sometimes she spoke of her hallucinat­ions. Together they traced the source of her trauma to her father’s sickroom and with the repressed unearthed, Pappenheim began to improve.

There was catharsis in this exchange.

Pappenheim herself described the process, which came to be known as “the talking cure,” as “chimney sweeping.” More than a decade later, Sigmund Freud included Pappenheim’s story under the name “Fraulein Anna O.” — a case in “Studies On Hysteria.” Later, Freud added apocryphal details to the case, including a pseudo-pregnancy that illustrate­d his theory of transferen­ce. Embellishm­ents aside, Anna

O. — psychiatry’s most famous inconvenie­nt woman — entered the annals of history as a success story that helped birth psychoanal­ysis.

The trouble is, as Gabriel Brownstein writes in his fascinatin­g “The Secret Mind of Bertha Pappenheim,” it was all a lie. Pappenheim was not cured. She continued to suffer long after Breuer gave up her case and ended up in a sanitarium, subjected to untold horrors, and addicted to the drugs that Breuer had prescribed her.

Her true triumph came long after she quit analysis. She emerged from this crucible in middle age, reinvented herself as an advocate and philanthro­pist and never again spoke of her time under Breuer’s care. She advocated on behalf of Jewish girls exploited by the sex trade, and opened institutio­ns to house and educate them.

But “The Secret Mind of Bertha Pappenheim” isn’t just about one woman — not entirely. This is a memoir nestled in an investigat­ion, hidden inside a mythology. And it’s really about the limits of knowledge: not just about what we know about Pappenheim, but about medicine specifical­ly and about non-fiction in general.

Fittingly, Brownstein’s interest in Pappenheim began with his father, Dr. Shale Brownstein, a respected psychiatri­st and psychoanal­yst with a longstandi­ng grudge against Freud. The night before he died, Dr. Brownstein gave his son an essay he had written about Pappenheim. And despite Freud’s warnings about burdening ourselves with our parents’ desires, the father’s obsession became the son’s.

Brownstein could have written a much easier book than the one he did. I haven’t even mentioned his third layer: examining Pappenheim’s case through new research on the diagnosis of functional neurologic­al disorder — the modern equivalent, he argues, of hysteria. F.N.D. is a controvers­ial diagnosis, despite being taken more seriously in recent years. This is not a rare condition; it is the second most common reason for outpatient neurology visits. Yet for some doctors it’s a scarlet letter, a signifier that the patient may be difficult or malingerin­g.

Cahalan is the author of “The Great Pretender” The New York Times

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