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Description
Laughter ceased to be an expression of joy; it mutated into an unstoppable, crippling pathogen that rewrote the medical rules of human empathy. In the winter of 1962, a single joke shared among schoolgirls in a remote boarding school triggered an event that defied all medical logic. What began as a ripple of giggles rapidly escalated into an uncontrollable, agonizing cascade of laughter that forced schools to close and paralyzed entire communities for months. How does a mere sound become a highly infectious pathogen?Contagious Hysteria meticulously investigates the Tanganyika laughter epidemic, cracking open the terrifying reality of mass psychogenic illness. It uncovers the hidden psychological mechanics of how extreme social stress and repressed anxiety can physically hijack the human nervous system, spreading physical symptoms from person to person without a single virus being present.The book explores the invisible social wires that connect our brains, demonstrating how the empathy centers of the mind can be weaponized by our own environment. It strips away the myth of the rational crowd, showing how easily collective perception can shatter under the right pressure.By understanding the anatomy of historical mass hysterias, readers will learn to recognize the subtle psychological contagions in modern society-from internet panics to corporate anxiety-and build an intellectual immune system against the madness of crowds.



