Encyclopedia > Joseph Merrick

  Article Content

Joseph Merrick

Joseph Merrick (1862-1890), known as "The Elephant Man", is a man who gained the sympathy of Victorian age Britain because of his grotesque deformity. His life story became the basis of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play and a film, both called The Elephant Man.

While Joseph Merrick was alive, physicians believed that he suffered from a condition known as elephantiasis. In 1971 Ashley Montagu[?] suggested that Joseph Merrick suffered from neurofibromatosis, a genetic disorder also known as von Recklinghausen's disease, and this disease is still connected with Joseph Merrick in the mind of the public. However, in 1979, Michael Cohen first identified a condition that was named Proteus syndrome[?] by Rudolf Wiedemann in 1983. In 1986 it was argued that it was the condition from which Joseph Merrick actually suffered. Proteus syndrome (named for the shape-shifting god Proteus), unlike neurofibromatosis, affects tissue other than nerves, and is a sporadic rather than familially transmitted disorder.

Books about or inspired by Joseph Merrick

  • The Elephant Man: A Study in Human Dignity - Ashley Montagu
  • The True History of the Elephant Man - Michael Howell, Peter Ford
  • The Elephant Man - Christine Sparks
  • Elephant Man - Bernard Pomerance
  • Articulating the Elephant Man: Joseph Merrick and His Interpreters - P. W. Graham, F. H. Oehlschlaeger



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Reformed churches

... (Independents, Lutheran, German Reformed) a congregational union of various union churches Most Presbyterian churches adhere to the Westminster Confession of Faith, bu ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 22.3 ms