- seCtIon sIx: seLF AnD otHeR
 if they could contact the dissociated personality.
 When James put Bourne into a hypnotic trance,
 Mr Brown reappeared, describing the places he
 had stayed and seeming unaware of any connec-
 tion with Bourne’s life. James and Hodgson tried in
 vain to reunite the two personalities and Hodgson
 concluded that ‘Mr. Bourne’s skull to-day still covers
 two distinct personal selves’ (James, 1890, i, p. 392).
 What does this extraordinary case of ‘fugue’ tell
 us? At the time, doctors, psychologists, and psy-
 chical researchers argued over whether it could
 be explained by epilepsy, fraud, split personality,
 psychic phenomena, or even spirit possession
 (James, 1890; Hodgson, 1891; Myers, 1903). Bourne
 had blackouts and seizures that might indicate
 epilepsy, but they could not, on their own, explain
 the extraordinary phenomena. Perhaps the most
 obvious thing to note is the connection between
 memory and selfhood. When the character of
 Brown reappeared, the memories of that missing
 time came back and the rest of life seemed vague or
 non-existent. When Bourne reappeared, the mem-
 ories of Mr Brown and the whole of his short and
 simple life were gone. As far as we know Mr Brown
 never returned, and by late 1887 this personality
 was gradually disintegrating.
 At about that time, Robert Louis Stevenson’s fantastic tale of The Strange Case of
 Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886) was published. By then many real-life cases of what
 became known as multiple personality had appeared. Hypnosis, or mesmerism, was
 popular for treating such conditions as hysteria, and occasionally doctors or psychia-
 trists found that hypnotised patients manifested a completely different personality.
 These patients, almost always women, did not just reveal different personality traits
 (the way we use the term ‘personality’ today), but appeared to be two or more dis-
 tinct people inhabiting a single body (what we might call persons or selves).
 Early in 1898, the Boston neurologist Dr Morton Prince was consulted by
 Miss Christine Beauchamp (Prince, 1906). She had endured a miserable and
 abusive childhood and was suffering from pain, fatigue, nervousness, and other
 symptoms which he treated with both conventional methods and hypnosis.
 Under hypnosis a second, rather passive, personality appeared (labelled BII),
 but one day Miss Beauchamp began speaking about herself as ‘she’ and a third
 personality called Sally had appeared (BIII). Sally was childish, selfish, playful, and
 naughty, while Miss Beauchamp was religious, upright, reserved, and self-con-
 trolled; Sally was fit and strong while Miss Beauchamp was weak and nervous.
 During many years of treatment, several more personalities appeared with differ-
 ent tastes, preferences, skills, and even states of health.
Sally used to delight in tricking Miss  Beauchamp by taking a long walk in the
dark and then ‘folding herself up’ to leave poor Miss Beauchamp to walk home,
terrified and ill. Even worse, Sally tore up Miss  Beauchamp’s letters, shockedFIGURE 16.2 • Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde: good
doctor and evil murderer sharing
the same body, from Robert
Louis Stevenson’s classic 1886
novel, here in the film adaptation
directed by Rouben Mamoulian
and starring Fredric March
(1931).
