Description

The first interdisciplinary history of vertigo, this book covers medical accounts from antiquity to the present, testimonies of lived experience, and literary and cultural representations of vertigo.

Balanced. Stable. Grounded. Levelheaded. Even-keeled. There is a long list of words that demonstrate how we attach extraordinary value to a metaphorical sense of balance. From Alfred Hitchcock's cinema, to Salvador Dalí's art, to the writings of Virginia Woolf and Elizabeth Bishop – authors and artists have repeatedly used their work to invoke vertigo, or the loss of balance, as a metaphor for trauma, disorientation, even existential crisis. But what about those of us who have to live with a vertigo that is all-too real? Based on more than thirty in-depth interviews with people who live with balance disorders, this book explores the connections between vertigo-as-metaphor and vertigo-as-lived experience.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Vertigo-as-Symptom and Vertigo-as-Metaphor
1. 'Nothing is quite where it is supposed to be': Negotiating Vertiginous Spaces
2. 'Moving in a hyperbolic sort of way': Speed and Vertigo
3. 'What if you jumped?”: Acrophobia and the Vertigo of Heights
4. 'Avoid shopping centres like the plague': The Supermarket and the Dizziness of Capitalism
5. 'We can't just go to McDonalds': Ingestion, Expulsion and Vertigo as Abject
6. 'Not quite right in the world': Vertigo and Digital Technology
7. 'My life was already smaller': Pandemic as Vertiginous Disruption
Conclusion: A Hermeneutics of Vertigo

Notes
References

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published 13 Nov 2025
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Extent 256
ISBN 9781350523524
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Series Critical Interventions in the Medical and Health Humanities
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Anindya Raychaudhuri

Anindya Raychaudhuri is Senior Lecturer at the Uni…

Related Titles

Environment: Staging