La Rivista di Donato — Le Magnétisme 1886/en
| 📰 Fonte primaria: rivista Le Magnétisme di Donato (1880-1886) |
| Questa pagina deriva dal corpus della rivista Le Magnétisme — Journal de Psycho-Physiologie diretta da Donato (Alfred d'Hont) e Édouard Cavailhon dal 1880 al 1886, pubblicata fra Parigi e Bruxelles. La rivista è la fonte primaria autobiografica e tecnica più importante per il metodo della fascinazione magnetica e per la tradizione del magnetismo europeo del tardo Ottocento.
Documenti Drive ISI-CNV — fascicoli digitalizzati:
|
The Le Magnétisme Journal (Paris, 1886) is the scientific publication founded by Donato himself, in which he describes in first person the principles and techniques of fascination. It is one of the most precious historical documents on hypnosis, because it contains Donato's own words, the testimonies of fascinated subjects, the scientific reports of Dr. Brémaud, and the comments of physicians of the era. The original document is preserved in the Bibliothèque nationale de France and is part of the ISI-CNV archive.
Donato's Introduction: The Journal as a Manifesto
Donato opens his journal with a declaration of principle that places his work in the continuity of the Mesmerian tradition. The adopted title is Le Magnétisme — and Donato explains why:
- «Le Magnétisme, tel est le titre adopté pour cette Revue, dans laquelle il sera constamment question de faits qui, tous, dérivent de la découverte mesmérienne. Condamner, repousser, méconnaître Mesmer et son magnétisme animal, ce serait condamner ses disciples, repousser ses continuateurs, méconnaître les diverses branches actuelles, si solides et si productives, de la science dont il a planté l'arbre.»
Donato lists the chain of transmission he recognizes as his heritage: Mesmer → de Puységur (somnambulism), Petetin (catalepsy), Braid (hypnotism), Lafontaine, Liébault, Bernheim, Charcot, Richet. And then he adds: somnambulism, hypnotism, fascination, suggestion are nothing but «rameaux de l'arbre mesmérien, de simples subdivisions du magnétisme animal».
Donato's Method Described by Himself
Donato describes his method in a lecture from December 1880 before the physicians of the Canton of Vaud, presided over by Dr. Marc Dufour. This is his exact technical description:
- «J'obtiens ce résultat d'une façon en quelque sorte foudroyante, en plongeant brusquement un regard très vif dans les yeux de la personne que je veux influencer. Celle-ci est aussitôt subjuguée (si l'expérience réussit) et attirée irrésistiblement par mes yeux qu'elle suit partout, les bras engourdis et ballants, les poings crispés, les jambes roides, la marche trébuchante, le corps contracté, le cou tendu, la tête saillante, la face congestionnée, le masque stupéfié, les yeux écarquillés et fixes, quelquefois injectés, les pupilles dilatées, les paupières paralysées, l'arcade sourcilière froncée, la bouche inerte, béante ou serrée. — Le pouls est fréquent, la respiration haletante, le cœur bat avec violence.»
This description is fundamental: it is not a sleep-inducing hypnosis, but a state of total wakefulness with paralysis of the will. The subject walks poorly, the body contracts, the face petrifies — but he is perfectly conscious.
The Three Principles of Donatization
The study notes in the ISI-CNV archive synthesize Donato's method into three fundamental axes:
L'ebranlement (the shaking): Donato does not induce slowly. His approach is based on a sudden blow — physical and mental. First he tires subjects with muscular efforts (making them press their hands against his), then he strikes with a brusque, close-up gaze. Fatigue is followed by a period of exhaustion during which subjects can fall into fascination.
Rapidity: «Work with the rapidity of lightning/surprise them». Speed is an integral part of the method. The lightning effect prevents the critical mind from reacting.
Inner energy: «Quick, ardent, impetuous to excess = electric person. Have a profound conviction.» Donato is categorical: fascination is not a mechanical technique. It requires an inner quality of the operator — an electric, ardent, convinced person.
The Three Phases of Exhaustion
The three types of excitation Donato uses to exhaust subjects before fascination:
- Muscular efforts: making them press their hands against his, hold them horizontally with force
- Fixity of gaze: making them stare into his eyes for entire minutes
- Difficult movements and changes in body position: making them turn, kneel, bend their head backward
Physical and nervous fatigue is followed by a period of vulnerability during which fascination occurs with lightning ease.
The Technical Process Step by Step
Donato's main method is described as follows in primary sources:
Step 1 — The hands: he asks the subject to press their palms with all their strength against his, held horizontally downward. All the subject's attention and physical force are concentrated in this effort. Intense muscular innervation prevents thoughts from scattering.
Step 2 — The lightning gaze: while the subject is still engaged in the effort, Donato looks at him suddenly, brusquely, very close up. Surprised, the subject recoils — and in that moment of surprise, Donato's gaze insinuates itself into his eyes.
Step 3 — The circular movement: Donato makes a circular movement with his head and body while continuing to stare at him with «devouring fixity». The subject, as if attracted, follows him with wide-open eyes that can no longer detach themselves from his.
Variant — Kneeling: he asks the subject to kneel and look him in the eyes. Standing before him, he places his hand on the forehead and tilts the head slightly backward. At the moment the subject tries to straighten it, Donato directs an imperative gaze into his pupils that paralyzes the sensitive.
The State of Fascination: Physiological Description
Dr. Brémaud, after his hundreds of experiments verifying Donato's method, describes the state with physiological precision. Two signs are identified as impossible to simulate: instantaneous pupil dilation and immediate increase in pulse. These signals cannot be produced voluntarily.
The most commonly observed state is catalepsy — increased muscle tone. The froissés (brushed-rubbed) muscles contract immediately. The subject is awake, fully conscious, but cannot withdraw their will from what is imposed upon them. As one subject wrote: «Je ne pouvais presque plus plier mes membres et il me semblait que la force des extenseurs surpassait celle des fléchisseurs» — the arms seem pulled by the extensors, impossible to bend them.
A Dutch subject, Marius Koning, a medical student, describes his experience: «D'abord j'ai vu dans vos yeux comme deux étincelles, mais bientôt ces deux étincelles ne formèrent qu'une seule boule de feu et je finis par ne plus voir qu'un seul point blanc très brillant.» A ball of fire, then a single brilliant white point — and then automatic movement.
The Two Progressive Phases of Fascination
Donato describes two progressive levels of the state:
Conscious phase: with a word, a gaze, a significant gesture, Donato makes the subject walk against their own will, stops the arm if they want to strike, blocks the legs if they want to walk. The subject is fully awake and can recount everything afterward.
Unconscious phase: progressively the power of a fixed idea takes complete possession of the subject. Their psychic individuality fades and «finishes by being absorbed into me». In this stage Donato can impose the falsest ideas, the most illusory sensations, the most unnatural desires — and the subject accepts them without resistance: «He has abdicated his will without regret, under the charm of a seductive fascination.»
Morselli's Neurophysiological Explanation
From the collection of notes in the ISI-CNV archive emerges the neurophysiological explanation of the state of fascination according to Prof. Morselli, who attended Donato's sessions in Italy:
Catalepsy is due to the reduction of central inhibitory activity and the exaggeration of the automatic reflex activity of the spinal cord. In fascination, will and attention no longer block movements — motor automatism sets in. Simultaneously, a psychic automatism installs itself where the higher centers (will and attention) no longer block associations.
Will is the inhibitory mechanism of the cortex. When this mechanism is reduced, every idea tends to transform directly into a motor element without the filter of conscious will. Donato's suggestion encounters no more resistance — the idea radiates where it finds the least resistance.
The three types of modified innervation in fascination: increased secretion, pupil dilation, increased heat (then skin cooling and cold sweat); change in respiration and circulation.
Fascination as a Disruptive Phenomenon
Donato's fascination was perceived as disruptive by the science of the era for a precise reason: it demonstrated that hypnosis required neither sleep nor hysteria. While Charcot maintained that hypnotism was a pathological phenomenon linked to hysteria, Donato fascinated dozens of healthy, normal people every evening, on the first attempt.
Dr. Brémaud had demonstrated with his four experiments that the phenomena were real, not simulated, not pathological, and reproducible on anyone with sufficient sensitivity. The logical consequence — which Bernheim would later develop theoretically — was that hypnosis is a normal phenomenon of the human mind, not a disease.
Donato wrote in his philosophical column in the journal: «Les inspirés sont toujours solitaires; ils peuvent régner au milieu de la médiocrité sans en être atteints; leur hauteur les isole. La solitude élève l'âme; la société la corrompt.»
Connection to the Method Paret
Donato's journal is one of the primary sources on which the teaching of fascination in ISI-CNV is based. The principles of donatization — l'ebranlement, rapidity, inner energy, preventive exhaustion of subjects — are an integral part of understanding the Ball of Light and the fascination techniques taught in the Method Paret.
Sources
Primary Sources
For the framework of the 19th-century European magnetic tradition, the main primary sources, all digitized in the ISI-CNV Drive folders, are:
- Franz Anton Mesmer, Mémoire sur la découverte du magnétisme animal, Genève-Paris, 1779.
- Armand-Marie-Jacques de Chastenet, Marquis de Puységur, Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire et à l'établissement du magnétisme animal, Paris, 1784.
- Joseph Philippe François Deleuze, Histoire critique du magnétisme animal, 2 vols., Paris, 1813.
- Charles Lafontaine, L'Art de Magnétiser ou le Magnétisme Animal, Paris, Germer Baillière, 1847 — PDF Drive ISI-CNV.
- Charles Lafontaine, Mémoires d'un magnétiseur, 2 vols., Genève, 1866 — vol. I PDF · vol. II PDF.
- Baron du Potet de Sennevoy, Manuel de l'étudiant magnétiseur, Paris, 1846; Traité complet du magnétisme animal, Paris, 1875; La Magie dévoilée, Paris, 1852.
- Donato (Alfred d'Hont) and Edouard Cavailhon (ed.), Le Magnétisme — Journal de Psycho-Physiologie, Paris-Bruxelles, 1880-1886 — issues 1-50, 50-104, 104-154, 154+ digitized in the ISI-CNV Drive (see page Donato — Il Padre della Fascinazione for direct links).
- Édouard Cavailhon, La Fascination Magnétique, Paris, E. Dentu, 1882.
- Albert de Rochas d'Aiglun, Les états profonds de l'hypnose, Paris, Chamuel, 1892; L'extériorisation de la sensibilité, Paris, 1895; Les états superficiels de l'hypnose, Paris, 1893.
- Hector Durville, Magnétisme personnel ou psychique, Paris, 1903; Traité expérimental de magnétisme, 2 vols., Paris, 1904-1907 — ISI-CNV Drive folder: Durville Books.
Anti-Hallucination Verification Dossier
The verifiable primary source excerpts for the Lafontaine/du Potet/Deleuze school are collected in the primary source excerpts dossier on the ISI-CNV Drive, part of the anti-hallucination verification system adopted by the School to ensure that every historical claim is traced back to a verifiable textual passage.
Secondary Reference Bibliography
- Adam Crabtree, From Mesmer to Freud: Magnetic Sleep and the Roots of Psychological Healing, Yale University Press, 1993.
- Henri F. Ellenberger, The Discovery of the Unconscious: The History and Evolution of Dynamic Psychiatry, Basic Books, 1970 (chapters on mesmerism and early hypnosis).
- Alan Gauld, A History of Hypnotism, Cambridge University Press, 1992.
- Bertrand Méheust, Somnambulisme et médiumnité (1784-1930), 2 vols., Le Plessis-Robinson, Synthélabo, 1999.
- Nicole Edelman, Voyantes, guérisseuses et visionnaires en France 1785-1914, Paris, Albin Michel, 1995.
- Daniel Pick, Svengali's Web: The Alien Enchanter in Modern Culture, Yale University Press, 2000.
- Marco Paret, A History of Hypnotism (ISI-CNV), for the placement of French-Italian magnetism in the line Mesmer → Puységur → du Potet → Lafontaine → Donato → Caravelli → Di Pisa → Paret.