http://www.cryptomundo.com/cryptozoo-news/outbreak/
Outbreak!: A Review
Posted by: Loren Coleman on June 6th, 2009
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From “Abdera Outbreak of Prose and Poetry” to “Zoot Suit Riots,” the book takes the reader on an incredible tour of the topics at hand. The classics of contagion behavior are here, e.g. the “Band Bus Hysteria,” “Cargo ‘Cults’,” “Copycat Behavior,” “Phantom Slasher,” “Pokemon Illness,” “Salem Witch Hunts,” “Suicide Clusters,” and “Windshield Pitting Scare.”
But it may be the more bizarre of the strange that gets some attention for the authors’ weird little treks into “Extraterrestrial Tsunami Panic,” “Feather Tickling Fad,” “Jumping Frenchmen of Maine” (a little more serious than the “kicking horse game” and “cabin fever”), “Masturbation Delusion” (obviously, an in-depth global survey), “Ugandan Running Sickness,” and “Wacky Wallwalker Fad.”
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The authors tip their hat by using the word “supernatural,” and give no basis for how the Windigo, a local name for Sasquatch, is viewed by some First Nations people. The real cryptid or unknown hominid is used as the model for the “boogie man” of the psychosis but does not need to be dismissed, out of hand, in their introduction. The windigo psychosis or wittiko psychosis is real, no doubt, but then too, so may be the “monsters of the woods,” the Windigo/Wendigo/Wittiko. The two topics are actually separate but equal, and I see again that the foggy psychosis has caused these writers to pen vague words about the hairy hominid too.
I suppose if you are going to credit an undated article on the “Windigo” psychosis published in the International Journal of Parapsychology for the source of your definition on “Windigo,” versus using more folkloric, anthropological, or cryptozoological references on the creatures, you better be prepared for me to not be happy with that entry.
The Windigo (also known as the Wendigo, Windago, Windiga, Wittiko, Wihtikow, and numerous other variants) is an unknown hairy hominid tied to the sightings, legends and folklore of First Nations people linked by the Algonquin languages. The range is much more broad than given in Outbreak!. The Windigo is a bipedal hairy creature, equal to the Eastern Bigfoot, Stone Giant, or Marked Hominid in some classification systems, which is often said to have aggressive behaviors. But the “Windigo Psychosis” has nothing to do with cryptozoology, except that a name is used for a mental disorder.
I do not hide the fact that I have differences in interpretation with these authors, for I find their black and white skeptical approach to a few of the encyclopedia’s events as being wholly too psychological-based, without any appreciation for the possible underlying factual reality to be found in some of these encounters. I predict that a few thoughtful suicidologists, social scientists or even ufologists reviewing this book would also have a few comments to make about some of their suicide epidemics or ufological entries, as well. It really depends on your point-of-view.
The book is well-organized, but it does take a few moments to understand the reasoning behind why some incidents are entries and why some items are subcategories under others.
The entries bounce back and forth, between the universal and the incredibly specific, such as, for instance, the worldwide “Streaking Fad” to little collections like the “Sick School Staff Syndrome,” and to the minute examples of one event, e.g, the “Ohio Chorus Fainting Fits,” which happened on one day, November 23, 1959.
The index is detailed in small print in 10 pages, and it helps a great deal, if, for example, you are looking for the “penis theft attacks” of 2001, which took place in Nigeria and Benin. Those aren’t mentioned in the section on “Genital Shrinking Scares,” but instead discussed under “Genital Vanishing Scares.” Certainly, an important difference.
Such reservations, however, do not distract me from being grateful these two scholars have written such a fine collection of cases, so we may all have this data at our fingertips now.
The book is a masterpiece, that’s for sure.
It will become a major reference work for those involved in researching these kinds of events or for those with a casual interest who wish to dive deeper into the literature and stories on such things.
Besides merely congratulating Anomalist Books for taking on the monumental task of publishing this important book, also I congratulate them for keeping the price reasonable, at $39.95 US. I already notice used copies are going for $55.21 on the American site, Amazon.com, so I say, if you are the least bit intrigued, buy it new, now.
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