Victor Hugo’s Nude Writing Lock-In: The Extreme Anti-Distraction Trick

When deadlines tightened and discipline failed, Victor Hugo did something that still sounds unbelievable today. He removed his clothes, handed them to his servant, and ordered the doors locked. Only then did he sit down to write. This wasn’t performance art or provocation. It was a practical response to a problem every creative worker recognizes: distraction. Hugo wasn’t trying to shock society. He was trying to finish his book. The result of this strange self-imposed confinement was The Hunchback of Notre-Dame, completed under intense time pressure. The method looks absurd now, but the thinking behind it is uncomfortably sharp. A Writer at War With Delay By the early 1830s, :contentReference[oaicite:0] was already famous, but fame had made him careless with…
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