Clinical lycanthropy is a rare psychiatric syndrome that involves a delusion that the affected person can transform into, has transformed into, or is, an animal. Its name is associated with the mythical condition of lycanthropy, a supernatural affliction in which humans are said to physically shapeshift into wolves. It is purported to be a rare disorder.
Affected individuals believe that they are in the process of transforming into an animal or have already transformed into an animal. This is also known as Species Identity Disorder or Species Dysphoria (also see Dissociative Identity Disorder). Clinical Lycanthropy has been associated with the altered states of mind that accompany psychosis (the mental state that typically involves delusions and hallucinations) with the transformation only seeming to happen in the mind and behavior of the affected person.
A study on clinical lycanthropy from the McLean Hospital reported on a series of cases and proposed some diagnostic criteria by which clinical lycanthropy could be recognised:
A patient reports in a moment of lucidity or reminiscence that they sometimes feel as an animal or have felt like one.
A patient behaves in a manner that resembles animal behavior, for example howling, growling, or crawling.
According to these criteria, either a delusional belief in current or past transformation or behavior that suggests a person thinks of themselves as transformed is considered evidence of clinical lycanthropy. The authors note that, although the condition seems to be an expression of psychosis, there is no specific diagnosis of mental or neurological illness associated with its behavioral consequences.
It also seems that clinical lycanthropy is not specific to an experience of human-to-wolf transformation; a wide variety of creatures have been reported as part of the shape-shifting experience. A review of the medical literature from early 2004 lists over thirty published cases of clinical lycanthropy, only the minority of which have wolf (Lycanthropy) or dog (Cynanthropy) themes.
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La thérianthropie ou zooanthropie est la transformation d'un être humain en animal, de façon complète ou partielle, aussi bien que la transformation inverse dans le cadre mythologique et spirituel concerné. Ce thème très ancien plonge ses racines dans le chamanisme et apparaît sur d'anciens dessins dans des grottes préhistoriques, comme la grotte des Trois-Frères en Ariège, il s'exprime aussi à travers de nombreuses légendes, comme celles du nahualisme ou de la lycanthropie.
Un lycanthrope , plus connu en français sous le nom de loup-garou , est, dans les mythologies, les légendes et les folklores principalement issus de la civilisation européenne, un humain qui a la capacité de se transformer, partiellement ou complètement, en loup, ou en créature anthropomorphe proche du loup. Cette transformation peut être due à plusieurs causes, comme une malédiction ou un rituel volontaire, et plus récemment la morsure ou griffure d'un loup ou d'un autre lycanthrope.
In mythology, folklore and speculative fiction, shape-shifting is the ability to physically transform oneself through unnatural means. The idea of shape-shifting is in the oldest forms of totemism and shamanism, as well as the oldest existent literature and epic poems such as the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Iliad. The concept remains a common literary device in modern fantasy, children's literature and popular culture.