The subject beneath the object

Featured in

  • Published 20171030
  • ISBN: 9781925498424
  • Extent: 264pp
  • Paperback (234 x 153mm), eBook

In 1990, a group of medical researchers theorised that Vincent van Gogh suffered from Ménière’s disease, rather than epilepsy. Ménière’s disease is an inner-ear disorder, causing vertigo and a fullness of the ear that leads to constant noise – something equivalent to listening to a seashell. Hearing loss occurs and worsens over time. Many sufferers will experience a ‘full-blown attack’, sometimes a series of them, in which they perceive the world as violently spinning for hours on end, the noise in their ear reaching an extreme level. Though I have found no validity in the theory after much research on Van Gogh (nor can I find anyone else who supports this theory), I can, and do, imagine what it might have meant.

 

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Share article

More from author

Settling

PoetryOutside and the blue below,the forming and vanishing slits of white:the Pacific Ocean. Always that momentdeep into the fifth hourgoing on the eighthwhen a...

More from this edition

Lake Misery

Fiction1 THE FIRST THING that happened was a woman came into the ranger station while I was on the phone to two brothers, telling them...

Effeminacy, mateship, love

Non-fictionTHIS YEAR – 2017 – is the hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the birth of the Australian writer Henry Lawson. Lawson scholar Paul Eggert, in his...

Shell

FictionFor the second instalment of our summer of Sunday-reading, Griffith Review celebrates Kristina Olsson's 'Shell', an excerpt from her 2018 novel by the same...

Stay up to date with the latest, news, articles and special offers from Griffith Review.