World Wide Words logo

MATTOID/ˈmætɔɪd/Help with IPA

Semi-insane.

That’s the definition given by its inventor, the nineteenth-century Italian criminologist Cesare Lombroso. He believed that criminality was inherited and that a criminal was born with physical defects identifying him as a degenerate human being, an atavism. He created mattoid from the Italian matto, insane, plus the ending -oid for some likeness or resemblance (from Greek eidos, form). He used it for what psychiatrists call “borderline dwellers”, those who exist on the margins between reason and madness — in everyday speech we might call them cranks, eccentrics, or misfits.

The word came into English in 1891 through a translation of his work Man of Genius and became popular for a while. H G Wells used it in several of his books, most notably in Mankind in the Making of 1903, in which he derides the theories of Lombroso and the Victorian phrenologists: “Among such theorists none at present are in quite such urgent need of polemical suppression as those who would persuade the heedless general reader that every social failure is necessarily a ‘degenerate’, and who claim boldly that they can trace a distinctly evil and mischievous strain in that unfortunate miscellany which constitutes ‘the criminal class’... These mattoid scientists make a direct and disastrous attack upon the latent self-respect of criminals.”

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

Submit this article to Digg Submit this article to Del.icio.us Submit this article to Reddit Submit this article to Slashdot Submit this article to StumbleUpon

World Wide Words is copyright © Michael Quinion, 1996–2008. All rights reserved. Contact the author if you want to reproduce this piece, but first see our advice page, which also has notes about linking. Your comments and corrections are welcome.

Page created 21 Jan 2006
News
Most visited pages
Random selections