The Dancing Mania by Justus Hecker audiobook. Genre: history In The Dancing Mania, physician and medical historian Justus Hecker investigates one of the strangest collective events recorded in European history: sudden outbreaks in which crowds of ordinary people began to dance uncontrollably for hours or days, collapsing from exhaustion, injury, and terror. Drawing on chronicles, church records, and early medical accounts, Hecker reconstructs famous episodes such as the great Rhine Valley outbreak of 1374 and later waves that swept through towns and villages, puzzling authorities who could neither command the dancers to stop nor agree on what, exactly, was happening. As priests, civic leaders, and doctors debate whether the cause is divine punishment, demonic influence, poison, disease, or a contagious disturbance of the mind, Hecker follows the human reality behind the reports: fear spreading through tight communities, desperate attempts at treatment, and the thin line between ritual, illness, and rumor. Along the way, he connects related phenomena like St. Vitus' dance and tarantism, using them to ask a larger question that still resonates: how can belief, stress, and environment combine to produce symptoms that feel completely physical to those who suffer them? For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:13:55) Chapter 02 (00:19:38) Chapter 03 (00:27:11) Chapter 04 (00:34:55) Chapter 05 (00:44:08) Chapter 06 (00:57:42) Chapter 07 (01:01:23) Chapter 08 (01:17:13) Chapter 09 (01:26:30) Chapter 10 (01:49:31) Chapter 11 (01:57:20) Chapter 12 (02:03:26) Chapter 13 (02:21:12) Chapter 14 (02:33:19) Chapter 15 (02:48:40) Chapter 16 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices