Michael Potts's Blog: Bits and Pieces: Book Reviews and Articles on Writing, Horror Fiction, and Some Philosophy - Posts Tagged "heart"

On Revealing the Raw Self in Writing

How would a person feel if she revealed her most secret self, her strangest quirks, in print for all to see? Some writers will not go there, fearing that someone will see their most secret self through the fiction. I have personally found that to be the case--the first novel nearly everyone writes is the one I wrote--the semi-autobiographical coming of age novel using a first person point of view. That is difficult to successfully pull off, and I was aware of that while writing. I have a "quirk" that is part of my ordinarily secret self, and I allowed the main character, Jeffrey Conley, to reveal that quirk in both my novels (End of Summer and Unpardonable Sin).

Since a psychologist has diagnosed me with Asperger's Syndrome, it is not surprising that I have obsessive interests. One of those interests is the human (biological) heart. Someone might yawn and ask, "Is that all? That doesn't make your character stand out." So I "took the plunge" and revealed that Jeffrey is sexually aroused by the sound of a woman's heartbeat. Including my quirk as part of Jeffrey makes an unusual character and one I could develop in unique ways. In my second novel, I make greater use of Jeffrey's heartbeat interest as well as adding more fictional elements, and Jeffrey comes to life more as a character independent, though closely related, to me. Jeffrey's fetish/fascination with the heart grows and colors his other actions, especially his reactions to women--and their reaction to him when he reveals his quirk. There is no judgement, just an imaginative showing of how Jeffrey's life might be in the particular world created for him in my imagination.

Authors should not be afraid to reveal their secret side through a character. That will both add depth and edginess to the character as well as give the author a grounding in the one who knows the character's quirk firsthand--the author himself.
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Published on November 01, 2014 19:59 Tags: asperger-s-syndrome, heart, heartbeat-fetish, writing, writing-fiction

Review of Fay Bound Alberti, Matters of the Heart: History, Medicine, and Emotion (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010)

Matters of the Heart: History, Medicine, and Emotion Matters of the Heart: History, Medicine, and Emotion by Fay Bound Alberti

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Fay Bound Alberti's book is a fascinating journey into the cultural history of the heart and its relation to emotions. From the time of Descartes's sharp separation between mind and body and his reduction of the body to a machine, the traditional view of the heart as the seat of emotion was subject to challenge. However, this was a live debate up until the early twentieth century, when contemporary science pushed the brain into the place of the heart so that the brain became the seat of emotions. Yet throughout the so-called process of mechanizing the heart, nineteenth century physicians still tended to accept the view of the centrality of the heart to emotional experience.

Although I cringe when I see the term "gendered," recalling the identity politics of postmodern cultural criticism, Alberti's historical account of functional vs. structural heart disease and which patients tended to be diagnosed with which in nineteenth century medcine. It is true that women tended to be diagnosed with functional heart disease and men with structural heart disease. She also notes the interesting fact that among the Victorian literati, having heart disease was a kind of status symbol, indicating greater sensitivity of emotions.

The nineteenth century view of the heart suggested a more holistic approach to the body and emotion than was later characteristic of the brain-centered view. The march of medical reductionism, in which the whole was understood in terms of its constituent parts, led to increasing specialization in medicine, including a sharp separation between neurology and cardiology, and a devolution of the heart to a mere pump.

Today, at least in some circles, this situation is changing. Stories of organ recipients allegedly taking on the personality of their donors abound. The Institute of Heart-Math accepts the view that the heart in itself is the chief causal factor in many emotions. The Canadian physiologist Andrew Armour (whom I met at a conference at the Vatican in 2005) has done considerable work on the "mini-brain" and nervous system in the heart. Yet reductionism remains strong, and we will have to wait and see whether holism will make major inroads into the current paradigm of medical practice.

If you want an excellent, scholarly book that brings the history of attitudes toward the heart from Descartes' time until today in to focus, then this is the book for you.



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Published on May 25, 2020 07:26 Tags: emotion, heart, heart-and-emotion, history-of-the-heart

Bits and Pieces: Book Reviews and Articles on Writing, Horror Fiction, and Some Philosophy

Michael   Potts
The blog of Michael Potts, writer of Southern fiction, horror fiction, and poetry.
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