Truman Show delusion
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The Truman Show delusion, also known as Truman syndrome, is a type of delusion in which the person believes that their lives are staged reality shows, or that they are being watched on cameras. The term was coined in 2008 by brothers Joel Gold and Ian Gold, a psychiatrist and a neurophilosopher, respectively, after the 1998 film The Truman Show.
The Truman Show delusion is not officially recognized nor listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association.[1]
Background
Rapid expansion of technology raises questions about which delusions are possible and which ones are bizarre.
The Truman Show is a 1998 comedy drama film directed by Peter Weir and written by Andrew Niccol. Actor Jim Carrey plays Truman Burbank, a man who discovers he is living in a constructed reality televised globally around the clock. Since he was in the womb his entire life has been televised, and all the people in his life have been paid actors. As he discovers the truth about his existence, Burbank fights to find an escape from those who have controlled him his entire life.[3]
The concept predates this particular film, which was inspired by a 1989 episode of The Twilight Zone in its 1980s incarnation, titled "Special Service", which begins with the protagonist discovering a camera in his bathroom mirror. This man soon learns that his life is being broadcast 24/7 to TV watchers worldwide.[4] Author Philip K. Dick wrote a novel, Time Out of Joint (1959), in which the protagonist lives in a created world in which his "family" and "friends" are all paid to maintain the illusion. Later science fiction novels repeat the theme. While these books do not share the reality-show aspects of The Truman Show, they do have in common the concept of a world that has been constructed by others, around one's personal aspects.
Delusions
Delusions – fixed, fallacious beliefs – are symptoms that, in the absence of organic disease, indicate psychiatric disease. The content of delusions varies considerably (limited by the imagination of the delusional person), but certain themes have been identified; for example, persecution. These themes have diagnostic importance in that they point to certain diagnoses. Persecutory delusions are, for instance, classically linked to psychosis.
Cultural impact
The content of delusions are invariably tied to a person's life experience, and contemporary culture seems to play an important role.[5] A retrospective study conducted in 2008[6] showed how delusional content has evolved over time from religious/magical, to political and eventually to technically themed. The authors concluded that:
sociopolitical changes and scientific and technical developments have a marked influence on the delusional content in schizophrenia.
Psychiatrist Joseph Weiner commented that:
...in the 1940s, psychotic patients would express delusions about their brains being controlled by radio waves; now delusional patients commonly complain about implanted computer chips.[7]
The Truman Show Delusion could represent a further evolution in the content of persecutory delusions in reaction to a changing pop culture.
Because reality shows are so visible, it is an area that a patient can easily incorporate into a delusional system. Such a person would believe they are constantly being videotaped, watched, and commented upon by a large TV audience.[7]
Reported cases
While the prevalence of the disorder is not known, there have been several hundred cases reported. There have been recorded instances of people suffering from the Truman Show Delusion from around the world. Joel Gold, a psychiatrist at Bellevue Hospital Center in New York City, and Clinical Associate Professor of psychiatry at New York University, and his brother Ian, who holds a research chair in Philosophy and Psychiatry at Montreal's McGill University,[3] are the foremost researchers on the subject. They have communicated, since 2002, with over a hundred individuals suffering from the delusion. They have reported that one patient traveled to New York City after 9/11 to make sure that the terrorist attacks were not a plot twist in his personal Truman Show, while another traveled to a Lower Manhattan federal building to seek asylum from his show.[3] Another patient had worked as an intern on a reality TV program, and believed that he was secretly being tracked by cameras, even at the polls on Election Day in 2004. He shouted that then-President George W. Bush was a "Judas," which brought him to Bellevue Hospital and Gold's attention.[8]
One of Gold's patients, an upper-middle class Army veteran who wanted to climb the Statue of Liberty in the belief that doing so would release him from the "show",[8][9] described his condition this way:
I realized that I was and am the center, the focus of attention by millions and millions of people ... My family and everyone I knew were and are actors in a script, a charade whose entire purpose is to make me the focus of the world's attention.[8]
The choice of the name "Truman Show Delusion" by the Golds was influenced by the fact that three of the five patients Joel Gold initially treated for the syndrome explicitly linked their perceived experiences to the film.[8]
Truman Syndrome
In the United Kingdom, psychiatrists Paolo Fusar-Poli, Oliver Howes, Lucia Valmaggia and Philip McGuire of the Institute of Psychiatry in London described in the British Journal of Psychiatry what they referred to as the "Truman Syndrome":
[A] preoccupying belief that the world had changed in some way that other people were aware of, which he interpreted as indicating he was the subject of a film and living in a film set (a ‘fabricated world’). This cluster of symptoms ... is a common presenting complaint in individuals ... who may be in the prodromal phase of schizophrenia.[10]
The authors suggest that the "Truman explanation" is a result of the patients' search for meaning in their perception that the ordinary world has changed in some significant but inexplicable way.
Medical relevance
The Truman Show delusion is not officially recognized and is not a part of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association.[1] The Golds do not say that it is a new diagnosis but refer to it as "a variance on known persecutory and grandiose delusions."[7]
Filmmaker's reaction
After hearing about the condition, Andrew Niccol, writer of The Truman Show, said, "You know you've made it when you have a disease named after you."[11]
See also
References
Notes
- ^ a b Grohol, John M. "DSM-VI: Reality TV Disorder" on PsychCentral
- ^ Marantz, Andrew (September 16, 2013). "Unreality Star: The paranoid used to fear the C.I.A. Now their delusions mirror "The Truman Show"". The New Yorker: 32–37.
- ^ a b c Kershaw, Sarah "Look Closely, Doctor: See the Camera?" The New York Times (August 27, 2008)
- ^ "Movies That Stole Their Plots from 'The Twilight Zone'" Flavorwire. N.p., 13 Aug. 2012. Web. 10 Aug. 2014.
- ^ Rokeach, Milton (2011). The Three Christs of Ypsilanti. NY, NY: New York Review Books. pp. 125, 127. ISBN 978-1-59017-384-8.
[September 15] [T]he [three] men [who have schizophrenia] had read about the Yeti in a magazine article on the Abominable Snowman; the introduction of this material marked a brand-new tack, about which we were to hear much more in the months to come...[October 30] I ask Leon if he is married. He replies that he is betrothed…to the Virgin Mary. He adds [a new belief] that his uncle said he could get a wife from the Yeti if he wanted to.
- ^ Skodlar B, Dernovsek MZ, Kocmur M (2008). "Psychopathology of schizophrenia in Ljubljana (Slovenia) from 1881 to 2000: changes in the content of delusions in schizophrenia patients related to various sociopolitical, technical and scientific changes". The International Journal of Social Psychiatry. 54 (2): 101–11. doi:10.1177/0020764007083875. PMID 18488404. S2CID 41662275.
- ^ a b c Wright, Suzanne "The Truman Delusion" on WebMD
- ^ a b c d "Reality Bites" Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine National Post (July 21, 2008)
- ^ Ellison, Jesse "When Life is Like a TV Show" Newsweek (August 2, 2008)
- ^ Fusar-Poli, Paolo; Howes, O.; Valmaggia, L.; McGuire, P. (2008). "'Truman' signs and vulnerability to psychosis". British Journal of Psychiatry. 193 (2): 168. doi:10.1192/bjp.193.2.168. PMID 18670010.
- ^ "NZ filmmaker adds to medical lexicon". 3 News NZ. March 20, 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-07-29. Retrieved 2017-10-25.
Further reading
- Deuze, Mark (2012). Media Life. Cambridge, UK: Polity. ISBN 978-0-7456-6203-9.
- Duncan, Erica (2015). "Suspicious Minds: How Culture Shapes Madness". American Journal of Psychiatry. 172 (1): 98–99. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.2014.14091092.
- Gold, Joel; Gold, Ian (November 2012). "The "Truman Show" delusion: Psychosis in the global village". Cognitive Neuropsychiatry. 17 (6): 455–472. doi:10.1080/13546805.2012.666113. PMID 22640240. S2CID 35017035.
- Gold, Joel; Gold, Ian (2014). Suspicious Minds: How Culture Shapes Madness. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781439181577.
- Mishara, Aaron L. & Fusar-Poli, Paolo (2013). "The Phenomenology and Neurobiology of Delusion Formation During Psychosis Onset: Jaspers, Truman Symptoms, and Aberrant Salience". Schizophrenia Bulletin. 39 (2): 278–286. doi:10.1093/schbul/sbs155. PMC 3576172. PMID 23354468.
- Varga, ÉJ; Herold, R; Tényi, T. (2016). "Effect of culture to delusions: Introduction of the Truman Show delusion". Psychiatria Hungarica (in Hungarian). 31 (4): 359–363.