Nathaniel Ayes' "The Soloist" and the History of Schizophrenia

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Schizophrenia is one of the most well known and surprisingly frequent psychological disorders today. Patients who have this disorder have problems separating reality from fantasy or delusion. Typically, the person with schizophrenia starts off with a small paranoia about something or someone and continues to get more and more problematic until he/she has trouble functioning in the real world because of emotional, physical, mental, or financial reasons. Because of this, most people who end up homeless have Schizophrenia because they are unable to keep a job, Nathaniel Ayes in the book The Soloist. Nathaniel was a cello player attending the Julliard school of music, one of the world’s most prestigious performing art schools, until he developed schizophrenia and was unable to continue. This book shows how much a disorder such as schizophrenia can turn a person’s life upside down in the course of as little as a few weeks.

Even though the word schizophrenia is only around a 100 years old, there are written document containing “diseases” that are very similar to cases of Schizophrenia dating all the way back to ancient Egypt. Studies have looked into ancient Greek and Roman literature and have shown that it is very likely that the general population most likely had some awareness of psychotic disorders, however, they did not have any ways to diagnose or treat these disorders. In most points in history anyone who was considered “abnormal”, whether because of physical, mental, or emotional issues, was treated the same. Most early doctors believed that mental disorders were caused by demon spirits or evil that had possessed the body. So, in order to treat these “possessed” people, doctors used various techniques to exorcise the...

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...opez did a great job at describing his interactions with Nathaniel and how strange a lot of his behavior was. One last thing that I found interesting was the fact that Schizophrenia is found equally in men and women, I would think that one would be higher than the other because of how different we are as human beings.

Works Cited
Corner, R. (2004). Fundamentals of abnormal psychology (4th ed.). New York: Worth Publishers.

Heinrichs, R. (2003). Historical origins of schizophrenia. 39(4), 349-363.

Lopez, S. (2008). The Soloist. New York: Putman Adult.

The New oxford american dictionary. (2005). Oxford University Press.

Schizophrenia. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.mentalhealth.com/dis/p20-ps01.html

Schizophrenia history: definitions through time. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.psychiatric-disorders.com/articles/schizophrenia/schizophrenia-history.php

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