The Reproduction of Evil: A Clinical and Cultural PerspectiveRoutledge, 17 giu 2013 - 216 pagine Why is it that victims of abuse so often become perpetrators, and what can psychoanalysis offer to these survivor-perpetrators, whose criminal conduct seems to transcend the possibilities of empathic psychoanalytic inquiry. In The Reproduction of Evil, Sue Grand engages these deeply troublesome issues in the belief that psychoanalysts can and should reclaim the study of what lies beyond ordinary human empathy. Her goal is to elucidate the link between traumatic memory and the perpetration of evil. To this end, she presents an interdisciplinary analysis, at once scholarly and passionate, of the ways in which families and cultures transform victims of malignant trauma into perpetrators of these very traumas on others. Through intensive case studies, Grand draws the reader into the world of the survivor-perpetrators who commit acts of child abuse, of incest, of racial persecution, even of homicide and genocide. By infusing psychoanalytic inquiry with cultural analysis and by supplementing clinical vignettes with well-chosen literary illustrations, Grand is able to convey the survivor-perpetrator's immediacy of experience in a manner that readers may find unsettling, even uncanny. By interweaving psychoanalytic, sociohistorical, and literary perspectives, Grand fills a critical lacuna in the literature about trauma and its intergenerational transmission. Her analysis of the psychodynamic processes and cultural tensions that bind perpetrators, victims, and bystanders provides trenchant insights into the violence and fragmentation that beset our society. Essential reading for a wide clinical audience, The Reproduction of Evil will also be powerfully informative for academic and lay readers interested in the intrapsychic, interpersonal, and cultural factors that account for the perpetuation of evil from generation to generation. |
Sommario
An Introduction to Malignant Dissociative Contagion | 1 |
Loneliness and the Allure of Bodily Cruelty | 21 |
Child Abuse and the Problem of Knowing History | 41 |
The Paradox of Innocence Dissociative States in Perpetrators of Bodily Violation | 61 |
Malignance and the Bestiality of Survival | 87 |
The Depravities of the Nonhuman Self Greed Murder Persecution | 115 |
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
The Reproduction of Evil: A Clinical and Cultural Perpsective Sue Grand Visualizzazione estratti - 2000 |
Parole e frasi comuni
adhesive analyst Analytic Press annihilation Armenia Aron aunt Auschwitz authentic autistic awaken become bestial gesture bodily body Bromberg child child abuse collapse countertransference Creature cruelty Dalai Lama dead death depressive desire despair destruction disavowal Donna doublethink dread emerged empathic enactments encounter evil evil's existence experience fantasy father fear feel felt forgiveness Frankenstein grief Grotstein guilt hate Hogarth Press human imagine incest innocence interior intersubjective knew lived located loneliness Macbeth malignant dissociative contagion memory Meursault modality moral mother mourning murder mutual never night terrors no-self nonhuman Northvale O'Brian object-related objective hatred Ogden one's pain paranoid-schizoid parents patient perpetrator perpetrator's possession projective identification psychic Psychoanal Psychoanalysis rage rape refusal relation Relational Psychoanalysis remorse reparative sadism schizoid seeks sense session sexual abuse silence slave solitude stepfather story subjectivity survival survivor terror therapeutic things tion torture transgression trauma truth University Press victim violation violence wanted Winnicott Winston York