Editing Psychogenic fugue

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: Dissociative fugue is one or more episodes of amnesia in which the inability to recall some or all of one's past is combined with either the loss of one's identity or the formation of a new identity. The episodes, called fugues, result from trauma or stress. Dissociative fugue often manifests as sudden, unexpected, purposeful travel away from home.
: Dissociative fugue is one or more episodes of amnesia in which the inability to recall some or all of one's past is combined with either the loss of one's identity or the formation of a new identity. The episodes, called fugues, result from trauma or stress. Dissociative fugue often manifests as sudden, unexpected, purposeful travel away from home.
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==== Role in making of ''Lost Highway'' ====
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fGbEEW I loved your article.Really thank you! Really Cool.
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David Lynch and Barry Gifford learned of "psychogenic fugue" during the production of ''Lost Highway'', after they had written the script.  Gifford seems to have researched the phenomenon at this point, and it has clearly shaped his interpretation of the film.  researched the phenomenon at this point, while Lynch did not.  However, the differences between the script and the film are minor, and it remains unclear that "psychogenic fugue" played any role in the production of ''Lost Highway'', though it may have influenced Gifford's thinking about the film.
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David Lynch and Barry Gifford have given information about the point at which they learned of psychogenic fugue and about whether the concept played a formative role in the writing of the script and the shooting of the film. 
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In an interview with Chris Rodley, printed in the paperback edition of the ''Lost Highway'' script, Lynch explains that he and Gifford learned of psychogenic fugue at some point during production and that psychogenic fugue did not play a role in the writing of the script.  Lynch explains that the unit publicist, who works on location during production, came across the term "psychogenic fugue."
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<blockquote>'''Chris Rodley:''' CiBy's pre-publicity for the movie encapsulates the entire synopsis in three words: "a psychogenic fugue."  Were you aware that such a mental condition actually existed?<br>'''David Lynch:''' No.  Barry and I didn't know what that was.  Deborah Wuliger, the unit publicist on the picture, happened to find it in a medical journal or something.  She showed it to us, and it was like ''Lost Highway''.  Not literally, but an interior thing can happen that's very similar.  A certain mental disturbance.  But it sounds like such a beautiful thing - "psychogenic fugue."  It has music and it has a certain force and dream-like quality.  I think it's beautiful, even if it didn't mean anything.<br>...<br>'''Chris Rodley:''' Given the near-perfect correspondences between a psychogenic fugue and ''Lost Highway'', it's hard to imagine that you didn't read up on it when working on the script.<br>'''David Lynch:''' No, no, no, no.  Certain things happen, ideas come along and they string themselves together and they form a whole and then a theme or something becomes apparent - if you wanna look for it.  But if you're true to those ideas, you don't need to know....</blockquote>
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In an article in ''Cinefantastique'' (Vol. 28, No. 10, Apr. 1997), Gifford was quoted as suggesting that psychogenic fugue played a formative role either in the writing of the script or in the shooting of the film.
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<blockquote>[T]he question that Lynch originally posed, as Gifford recalls, was: "What if one person woke up one day and was another person?"  Gifford said, "We had to create a scenario to make that plausible. We discovered a clinical, psychological condition which fit our premise - a 'psychogenic fugue.' It's as if you decided to change your life and showed up with a different name and entirely created a new identity for yourself and really grew to believe you were this new person. There are different kinds of fugue states, and a psychogenic fugue takes place only in your own mind - you don't really go anywhere. It's a mental fugue, for lack of a better term. This was something I researched with a clinical psychiatrist at Stanford, so we had some basis in fact here. After we found that freedom, more or less it was just a matter of creating this surreal, fantastic world that Fred Madison lives in when he becomes Pete Dayton."</blockquote>
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However,
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<blockquote>Barry may have his idea of what the film means and I may have my own idea, and they may be two different things. And yet, we worked together on the same film. The beauty of a film that is more abstract is everybody has a different take.</blockquote>
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<blockquote>In fact, I never told people what it [<i>Lost Highway</i>]meant. I did mention this business about psychogenic fugue, as did David, in many interviews. We did agree that we would never explain the film, and we haven’t, to my knowledge. It’s for each person to make up his own mind about it. He’s absolutely right, except that that phrase was in fact used in the promotion in the film, so I wasn’t talking out of school.</blockquote>
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More information is needed to reconcile these quotes from Lynch and Gifford.  The script was completed in June, 1995, and filming began in Sep., 1995.  It may be the case that Lynch and Gifford learned of psychogenic fugue during production, after writing the script, and that Gifford researched the phenomenon at this point, while Lynch did not.  However, the differences between the script and the film are minor, and it remains unclear that "psychogenic fugue" played any role in the production of ''Lost Highway'', though it may have influenced Gifford's thinking about the film.
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==== Parallels to ''Lost Highway'': psychogenic fugue ====
==== Parallels to ''Lost Highway'': psychogenic fugue ====

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