Genter - We-All-Go-a-Little-Mad PDF
Genter - We-All-Go-a-Little-Mad PDF
Genter - We-All-Go-a-Little-Mad PDF
Sometimes: Alfred
Hitchcock, American
Psychoanalysis, and the
Construction of the
Cold War Psychopath
Robert Genter
6 Canadian Review of American Studies/Revue canadienne detudes americaines 40, no. 2, 2010
doi: 10.3138/cras.40.2.133
by renowned horror writer Robert Bloch. Bouchers enthusiastic
review of what he referred to as an icily terrifying yet believable
history of mental illness (Boucher 25) encouraged Hitchcock to
instruct his agent at MCA to purchase the screen rights. Blochs
horric tale of a forty-year-old motel keeper, who had, years prior
to the events of the novel, murdered his mother and then inter-
Canadian Review of American Studies 40 (2010)
nalized her personality to relieve his guilt and who then directed
his murderous rage onto helpless motel occupants, was the perfect
vehicle for Hitchcocks lifelong interest in murder, deviant sexual-
ity, and psychopathology. In a number of lms, including Shadow
of a Doubt and Strangers on a Train, Hitchcock had already linked
perversion and criminal behaviour and had used the language of
psychoanalysis as an explanatory tool. But Psycho, with its grizzly
shower scene, seemed too audacious for Hitchcocks conservative
studio producers at Paramount.1 Consequently, in order to get
the lm made, the famed director had to scale back his normal
production costs and dispense with his usual, well-paid lm stars.
Although he received favourable coverage from the New York Times
during the shooting of his lm, Hitchcock was mostly lambasted
by critics for failing to reach the high standard he had previously
set (Coe 20). Echoing the sentiments of many, New York Times
134 lm critic Bosley Crowther called Hitchcocks lm old-fashioned
melodramatics (37).
In fact, Psycho was just the most visible document to issue a warn-
ing about the deviant behaviour lurking within each individual. By
1960, policy makers had already alerted the public to the dangers
mental illness posed to the body politic. Under the auspices of the
National Mental Health Study Act of 1955, the US Congress, for
instance, established the Joint Commission on Mental Illness and
Health, a research organization designed to collect nationwide data
on the psycho-therapeutic profession. One of the eleven mono-
graphs produced by the Commission was a study that polled 2,460
Americans about their psychological well-being. Published the
same year that Hitchcock released his feature, Americans View Their
Mental Health revealed that, despite differences in class position or
educational level, most Americans felt a persistent undercurrent
of isolation and a sense of helplessness in the face of events
135
(Gurin, Veroff, and Field xiii). In general effect, the authors
declare, the GurinVeroffField monograph supports the com-
Eli Zaretsky has noted, America became the unofcial capital of the
psychoanalytic community in the 1940s, as famed theorists, such
as Helen Deutsch, Heinz Hartmann, and Theodor Reik, helped
to found institutes in Los Angeles, New York, and Chicago (276).
Scarred by witnessing European civilization collapse under fascism,
these analysts also brought the pessimism of Freuds Civilization
and Its Discontents to America, helping to alert their seemingly
nave counterparts to the spectre of collectivist politics. As the
vocabulary of psychoanalysis seeped into every academic dis-
course, offering new analytic tools to sociologists and political
scientists, these analysts interjected a larger concern with group
psychology. Soon, American intellectuals, particularly those anthro-
pologists associated with the culture and personality school, used
psychoanalysis to dissect the character of those nations partici-
pating in the war. Works such as Margaret Meads And Keep Your
138 Powder Dry: An Anthropologist Looks at America (1942) and Ruth
Benedicts The Chrysanthemum and the Sword: Patterns of Japanese
Culture (1946) treated someones characterhis or her behaviour,
attitudes, moral direction, and so onas the product of the shared
traits of a given society during the course of its development. The
assumption guiding such works was that particular child-rearing
practices reinforced particular psychological traits (oral, anal, or
genital xations) that led to the formation of particular character
types. After the war, books such as David Riesmans The Lonely
Crowd and Geoffrey Gorers The American People: A Study in National
Character used Freudian concepts to describe the American charac-
ter, pointing to everything from the economic dislocations of the
Great Depression to the spread of mass culture in order to explain
deviant behaviour. Indeed, the psychoanalytic and sociological
literature of the 1950s was littered with a host of character types
the rebel, the juvenile delinquent, the homosexual, and so on
character types that had supposedly been produced by certain
distortions in psychological development.
This connection between crime ction and real crime drama is best
exemplied in the work of Robert Bloch. Originally a crafter of
supernatural tales in the tradition of H.P. Lovecraft, Bloch rst
experimented with the crime genre in his 1943 short story, Yours
Truly, Jack the Ripper, a ctional portrayal of the most famous
serial killer of all. Blochs successful 1947 novel The Scarf continued
146 his exploration of the psychopathic personality, telling the tale of
a budding novelist, Daniel Morley, whose high school seduction
by his English teacher leaves him with a profound rage against
women. Desperate to exorcize this memory, Morley spends his
adult years murdering a series of lovers, using the maroon scarf
with which his former teacher had once bound him. Blochs deci-
sion to use the rst-person narrative to explore the workings of
his characters mind parallels the deciphering of the psychopathic
mind in the litany of true case histories published concurrently.
In fact, psychiatrist Wertham favourably reviewed Blochs novel in
the pages of the American Journal of Psychotherapy, claiming that
in terms of scientic accuracy and good writing in general, this is
a book to be recommended (qtd. in Larson 69). Like many other
novelists and screenwriters, Bloch readily borrowed from actual
cases to construct his tales. For his most famous novel, Bloch turned
to the shocking story of Ed Gein, a fty-one-year-old Wisconsin
farmhand who was arrested in 1957 for the murder of two local
women. When authorities searched his home, they discovered the
severed remains of countless other bodies exhumed from a local
cemeteryten skins of human heads, neatly separated from the
skull; assorted pieces of human skin, some between the pages of
magazines, some made into small belts, some used to upholster
seats; [and] a box of noses (Portrait 39). Geins house of
horrors, according to Life magazine, was the most macabre of
horror stories, one that gave Americans everywhere a grim aware-
ness that what had happened in an obscure Wisconsin town might
have happened anywhere (House 25). As tales of his odd
behaviour unfolded in newspapersfrom his pathological relation-
ship with his dead mother, whose bedroom remained completely
untouched, to his fashioning of a vest made from female esh
he often donned late at nightGein, who was committed to the
Wisconsin State Hospital for the Criminally Insane, became a
symbol of the murder spree [dotting] the pages of crime annals
in the U.S. (Murder 3).
Bloch was aware that case histories of deviants such as Gein had
captured the national imagination and, after reading accounts of
the Wisconsin mans crimes, quickly transformed his story into the
1959 novel Psycho. In so doing, Bloch retraced a decade-long dis-
cussion about the psychopathfrom the psychoanalytic under-
standing of the aetiology of psychopathology to the assumed link
between political and sexual deviance. Indeed, Bloch argued that
his story was inspired not by Gein himself but by the murders he
147
had committed. According to Bloch, he, in fact, did not know any
details of Geins life when writing Psycho and only realized after-
148 Hitchcock was well aware that his translation of Blochs novel
followed this trend. Consequently, he insisted that his version of
Psycho was not a case history told in a documentary manner like
the litany of psychoanalytic tales littering bookshelves (Hitchcock,
On Style 294). But the changes he made to Blochs narrative
belie his insistence that he is uninterested in exploring the causes
of deviance. In particular, Hitchcock foregrounds the psychiatric
evaluation of Norman at the end of the lm, choosing to have a
psychiatrist present his ndings through an extended monologue
to a group of passive listeners instead of having Sam, the dead
heroines boyfriend, provide the translation, as Bloch does in his
novel. Hitchcock recognized that audience reception of Normans
story hinged on acceptance of the psychiatrists evaluation. In
fact, after Simon Oakland, the actor who played the psychiatrist,
completed the scene, Hitchcock went over and shook the actors
hand, saying Thank you very much, Mr. Oakland. Youve just
saved my picture (qtd. in Rebello 128). Like Bloch, who con-
tributed to the popularization of psychoanalysis in the post-war
period, Hitchcock drew upon the writings of the Viennese doctor
he had read while living in London in the 1920s. Indeed, despite
the claims of many of his defenders, Hitchcock helped to contribute
to the triumph of the therapeutic, offering sympathetic portraits
of psychotherapy in Spellbound and The Wrong Man and using
Freudian language in Notorious, Marnie, and Frenzy. Moreover, like
Bloch, Hitchcock was concerned with the apparent link between
sexual and political deviance. In Rope, for instance, Hitchcock con-
nects the homosexual desires of his two main characters to their
remorseless killing of their friend and to their proto-Nietzschean
defence of authoritarianism, a theme similarly found in North by
Northwest. As a refugee of both England and Germany, Hitchcock
meditated on the horric crimes committed in the name of fas-
cism and offered to contribute to a British documentary on the
Holocaust, a project that never came to fruition. But the extended
shower scene in Psycho, which Bloch limits to only a few sentences,
visually recalls those crimes overseas.
In this way, even more than Bloch, Hitchcock makes mental health
the focus of his lm. Most famously, Hitchcock extends the opening
Canadian Review of American Studies 40 (2010)
Notes
1 On the production of the lm, see Rebello.
2 The history of the concept of the psychopath is detailed in Millon,
Simonsen, and Birket-Smith.
3 On the spread of sexual psychopath laws, see Hacker and Frym.
4 On the changing role of women in post-war America, see Meyerowitz.
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