Shattered Perception: The Narrator of “The Sandman” as a Schizophrenic

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According to the Johns Hopkins Medicine Website , schizophrenia is “a mental illness that usually strikes in late adolescence or early adulthood, but can strike at any time in life” that is characterized by “delusions, hallucinations, bizarre behavior, [and] disorganized speech” among other symptoms. Schizophrenia is, at its core, the altering of a person’s perception of reality by some somatic means and when observed by a psychologically sound individual, can be quite unsettling. After all, seeing a person whose reality is fractured causes us to doubt our own reality, if only in a fleeting thought.

In Hoffmann’s “The Sandman” , there is a re-occurring theme of the uncanny that is commented on by both Sigmund Freud and Ernst Jentsch, who try to explain the uncanny in different ways by highlighting events and imagery that they believe to play a key role in creating it. I however, would argue that the uncanny is a more universal theme in the story and likewise, it’s source will be much more general. In the course of this paper, I intend to prove that the source of the uncanny is the fact that the reader doubts the reality they are presented within the text in the same way that one would doubt the reality that is perceived by a schizophrenic. This is due to the fact that the narrator suffers from schizophrenia and a possible dissociative personality disorder. Furthermore, the events of the short story only occur within the twisted mind of the narrator and represent a series of psychical manifestations that were most likely imagined as a defense mechanism to deal with the traumatic loss of his father and siblings.

I understand that now, you may be taken aback by the outrageous claim that I have made and indeed, there seems to be in...

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... the destruction of the major source of dissonance, “Coppelius [disappears]” (Hoffmann, 214) and order is restored in the narrator’s broken psyche.

The narrator remains plagued by schizophrenia however, as he still speaks of Clara as an individual, but is relieved of the conflict that his ill-repressed fears had caused him throughout his life noting that “Clara had been seen sitting hand in hand with a pleasant gentleman, whilst two bright boys were playing at her feet.” (Hoffmann, 214) Perhaps the narrator finally found some semblance of peace and happiness in his shattered perception.

Works Cited

"What Is Schizophrenia?" Johns Hopkins Medicine, Based in Baltimore, Maryland. Web. 26 Mar. 2010. .

E. T. A. Hoffman, "The Sand-Man," in The Best Tales of Hoffman, ed. E. F. Bleiler (New York: Dover, 1967).

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