- Genital retraction syndrome
Genital retraction syndrome (GRS), generally considered a
culture-specific syndrome , is a condition in which an individual is overcome with thebelief that his/her externalgenital s—or also, in females,breast s—are retracting into the body, shrinking, or in some male cases, may be imminently removed or disappear. A penis panic is amass hysteria event orpanic in which males in a population suddenly believe they are suffering from genital retraction syndrome.Penis panics have occurred around the world, most notably in
Africa andAsia . Local beliefs in many instances assert that such syndromes are often fatal.In cases where the fear of the penis being retracted is secondary to other conditions, psychological diagnosis and treatments are under development. It is becoming increasingly clear that these forms of
mass hysteria are more common than previously thought.The phenomenon is often, but not always, associated with
occult belief, such aswitchcraft . These panics frequently, but not exclusively, occur in places where access to education—particularly in science and human biology—is limited, or otherwise restricted (for example, when government policies restrict such education). Others have been reported under the influence ofdrug use . ("Compare withcastration anxiety .")Southeast Asia: "Koro"
Penis panics in
southeast Asia have become known under the term "Koro" (which means "head of the turtle" in Malay). Some anthropologists have referred to Koro as aculture-bound syndrome , but it is phenomenologically related, if not identical, to penis panics in various cultures. Koro most commonly describes the extreme fear that the penis is retracting into the body, including the idea that such retraction will bring aboutdeath . It can also refer to beliefs of "genital theft" or some kind of sorcery which has resulted in the loss of the penis. Sometimes thetesticle s are also believed to be affected.Koro also tends to reflect a certain
xenophobia among some groups, whereby foreigners are often blamed as the ones behind the "attacks".In Chinese, the term used for the condition is the Chinese term shook yang (suo yang, 縮陽). Outbreaks of Koro in China were reported in 1948, 1955, 1966, 1974 and 1984/85, although none have been reported in the 20 or so years since (Tseng 2006).
A condition called "Bang-utot" (or
bangungot ) matching the description of Koro is a repeated theme inWilliam S. Burroughs ' book "Naked Lunch ".Although Koro goes back to ancient times, beliefs have evolved to better suit modernity. Whereas in the past the causes were usually identified as supernatural, e.g. sorcery, a recent Koro episode in Northern Thailand placed the blame on Vietnamese Communist agents who supposedly put chemicals in the water supply. [ [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/905791 "Mass-hysteria with Koro-symptoms in Thailand"] , Schweiz Arch Neurol Neurochir Psychiatr. 1977;120(2):257-9]
Sufferers may resort to extreme physical measures to prevent the believed retraction of the penis. As well as affecting individuals, Koro-like syndromes can often occur in an outbreak of mass hysteria.
Koro most commonly strikes men, but rare cases are known to involve women and the fear that either their external genitals or
nipple s are retracting into the body.Aside from the emotional distress, Koro by itself is not physically harmful, and no actual retraction takes place. Injuries have occurred when stricken men have resorted to apparatus such as needles, hooks, fishing line, and shoe strings, to prevent the disappearance of their penises.
An epidemic struck
Singapore in 1967, resulting in thousands of reported cases. Government and medical officials alleviated the outbreak only by a massive campaign to reassure men of the anatomical impossibility of retraction together with a media blackout on the spread of the condition.Koro has been successfully treated with a course of
alprazolam andimipramine (which arepsychiatric medication s, the former used to treatanxiety disorder s).Fact|date=July 2008Africa
The belief has triggered waves of panic in
Senegal ,Benin ,Ghana ,Zimbabwe ,Nigeria ,Sudan andCongo-Kinshasa at various times in the last decade. [ [http://urbanlegends.about.com/cs/horrors/a/attack.htm "Attack of the Penis Shrinkers!"] , David Emery, About.com, August 17, 1997]Benin
On November, 2001, in the commercial capital of
Cotonou ,Benin , authorities have ordered security forces to curb violence, following the deaths of five people by vigilantes. There have been reports of at least 10 such attacks. Four of those who died were burned, another man was hacked to death. Correspondents say that mobs have attacked individuals accused of using magic to steal men's penises. [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/1678996.stm BBC News | AFRICA | Benin alert over 'penis theft' panic ] ]Congo-Kinshasa
On April, 2008, Kinshasa,
Democratic Republic of Congo , the police arrested 14 suspected victims (ofpenis snatching) andsorcerers accused of using black magic orwitchcraft to steal (make disappear) or shrink men's penises to extort cash for cure, amid a wave of panic. Arrests were made in an effort to avoid bloodshed seen inGhana a decade ago, when 12 alleged penis snatchers were beaten to death by mobs. [ [http://africa.reuters.com/odd/news/usnL22903232.html "Lynchings in Congo as penis theft panic hits capital"] , Reuters, April 23, 2008.] [ [http://edition.cnn.com/WORLD/9701/18/briefs/ghana.penis.html "7 killed in Ghana over 'penis-snatching' episodes"] , CNN, January 18, 1997.]Sudan
In September 2003, the
Middle East Media Research Institute reported a hysteria inKhartoum , capital ofSudan .fact|date=September 2008Sudanese victims were made to believe by force of suggestion that their
penis es would melt away after they shook hands, shared a comb, or received a verbalcurse . The so-called "penis-melting" has been blamed on Zionists trying to wipe out the Sudanese people by making their men unable to reproduce. fact|date=September 2008The hysterical reports were spread throughout Sudan by means of cell phone text-messaging.
Sudanese police investigated the claims and have found no evidence of anything supernatural, and that it is likely a hoax which victims believed through the power of suggestion. Mr. Abul-Gasim Mohamed Ibrahim, Sudan's Minister of Health, issued official statements to calm the public's fears.
Local media also contributed to the idea's spread. The Sudanese columnist Ja'far Abbas (a satirical writer) has warned visitors to avoid shaking hands with "a dark-skinned man". In reference to the electronic comb which was supposed to have caused one man's penis to disappear, Abbas writes, "No doubt, this comb was a laser-controlled surgical cyborg that penetrates the skull, [passes] to the lower body and emasculates a man!!"
The phrase "Penis-melting Zionist cyborg combs" has been coined to describe this humorous story. It was originally incorrectly attributed to "
Wall Street Journal 's" James Taranto writing in his "Best of the Web Today". [ [http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=110004204 The Wall Street Journal Online - Best of the Web Today ] ] However, the article in question has no such phrase, nor anything similar beyond the aforementioned quote.Medical viewpoints
Documented cases have not typically indicated actual instances of penis shrinkage or retraction. Any actual injury or damage that occurs to individuals usually arises from overly zealous attempts at preventing retraction. Medical response generally consists of informing patients that the genitals anatomically cannot retract or shrink in the manner typically feared.
As one academic work states, GRS seems to be similar in many ways to the Western category of
panic attack , with sexual elaborations. It seems probable that, in a culture where sexual anxiety is high and stories exist of death by genital retraction, a man in the right frame of mind could panic at the observation that his genitals are shrinking in response to cold or anxiety.ee also
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Vagina dentata References
Further reading
* Cheng, S.T., A Critical Review of Chinese Koro. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry. 1996 20:67-82
* Tseng, W.S., From Peculiar Psychiatric Disorders through Culture-bound Syndromes to Culture-related Specific Syndromes. Transcultural Psychiatry. 2006 43(4):554-576
* Psychology - The science of mind and behaviour. Michael W. Passer & Ronald E. Smith. 3rd edition P.542 (Sociocultural factors for Anxiety disorder)External links
* [http://www.emro.who.int/Publications/EMHJ/0503/21.htm World Health Organization article about Koro, with bibliography]
* [http://weber.ucsd.edu/~thall/cbs_koro.html Suo yang (Koro): The Genital Retraction Syndrome] at UCSD
* [http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2002/9/16/81843/6555 Koro: A Natural History of Penis Panics] ,September 16 ,2002 ,Kuro5hin
* [http://cfpm.org/~majordom/memetics/2000/16163.html October 22 report by the Middle East Media Research Institute: "Panic in Khartoum: Foreigners Shake Hands, Make Penises Disappear"]
* [http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=110004204 Wall Street Journal's "Best of the Web Today," Wednesday, October 22, 2003]
*"Genitals ‘Disappearance’ Rocks Patani Community", Nigerian Daily Independent's 7 March, 2006 report
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A593354 Koro - the Genital Retraction Syndrome] - BBC h2g2, Page dedicated to Koro
* [http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080422/od_uk_nm/oukoe_uk_congo_democratic_witchcraft Lynchings in Congo as penis theft panic hits capital] Dead link|date=July 2008
* [http://harpers.org/archive/2008/06/0082063 A mind dismembered: In search of the magical penis thieves] ,Harper's Magazine , Frank Bures, June 2008.
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