Fear of trains

For other uses, see Fear of trains (disambiguation).
A 1842 VersaillesBellevue line disaster. News about events like this one contributed to train anxiety

The fear of trains is anxiety and fear associated with trains, railways, and railway travel. It has been variously called as "train phobia", "railroad phobia", "dread of railway travel", etc. The German term "Eisenbahnangst" used, e.g., by Sigmund Freud[1] was literally converted into Greek as "siderodromophobia" (Eisen = sideron = iron, Bahn = dromon = way, Angst = phobos = fear).[2] In cases when this anxiety exceeds the social norms of a realistic fear, this anxiety may be classified as a phobia about trains.[3] Campbell's Psychiatric Dictionary puts fear of trains under the "vehicle phobia", togerter with fears of boats, airplanes, automobiles, and other forms of transportation.[4]

Psychoanalysis

Psychonalysts, starting from Freud himself, associated sensations towards travel by train with sexuality. In 1906 Freud wrote that the link of railway travel and sexuality derives from the pleasurable sensation of shaking during the travel. Therefore, in the event of repression of sexuality the person will experience anxiety when confronted with railway travel.[1][5] Karl Abraham interpreted the fear of the uncontrollable motion of a train as a projection of the fear of uncontrolled sexuality.[5] Wilhelm Stekel (1908) also associated train phobia with rocking sensation, but in addition to libido repression, he associated it with the embarrassment with the reminiscences of the rocking sensation of the early childhood.[1]

Other considerations

Freud himself was suffering a kind of train anxiety, as he confessed in a number of letters.[6] He used the term "Reisenangst" for it, which literally means "fear of travel" but it was recognized it was primarily associated with the travel by train,[7] and some translators translated Freud's "Reisenangst" as "railroad phobia"[6] However Freud's anxiety was not a "true " phobia.[7]

Regardless of sexuality, since early days various authors associated the uncontrollable motion of the train with the fear of derailment, of a catastrophe.[5]

Another source of fear in the early days of railway travel was travellers' isolation from the outside world, as well as the confinement in a small compartment, rendering a person who became sick or subject to crime, helpless. "...The loudest screams are swallowed up by the roar of the rapidly revolving wheels...".[8] This kind of fear, as well as actual crimes committed in trains, were often a matter of newspaper publications of the times.[9] After a number of prominent cases this fear was elevated to the level of collective psychosis.[10] Public fear about rail travel was heightened after British surgeon John Eric Erichsen described a post-traumatic diagnosis known as railway spine or "Erichsen's disease". People diagnosed with this had no obvious injury and were rejected as fake. Nowadays it is known that traffic accidents may cause posttraumatic stress disorder.[11]

Cultural references

A 1913 short story Terror by Jun'ichirō Tanizaki is a first-person narrative of a young man suffering of the morbid fear of travel in trains and streetcars. Tanizaki uses the German word Eisenbahnkrankheit, "railroad sickness".[12]

See also

Other travel-related anxieties include:

Other transport-related disorders include:

References

  1. 1 2 3 Wilhelm Stekel, Nervöse Angstzustände und ihre Behandlung; citing Freud in German, pp. 191-198
  2. Otto Dornblüth, Klinisches Wörterbuch. 1927.
  3. Aaron T. Beck, Gary Emery, Ruth L. Greenberg, Anxiety Disorders and Phobias: A Cognitive Perspective, 2005, ISBN 046500587X, p. 30
  4. Campbell's Psychiatric Dictionary, pp. 1022-1023
  5. 1 2 3 Wolfgang Schivelbusch, The Railway Journey: The Industrialization of Time and Space in the 19th Century, p. 78, citing Sigmund Freud as translated in English, "The Complete Psychological Work"
  6. 1 2 Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, Volumes 16-18, p. 73
  7. 1 2 Paul C. Vitz, Sigmund Freud's Christian Unconscious, . 25
  8. As cited by W. Schivelbusch, p. 79
  9. W. Schivelbusch, pp. 79-83
  10. W. Schivelbusch, p. 83
  11. Keller T., Chappell T., "The rise and fall of Erichsen's disease (railroad spine)" PMID 8817791
  12. Alisa Freedman "Tokyo in Transit: Japanese Culture on the Rails and Road", p. 207
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