Terrorism and War Unconscious Dynamics of Political Violence

"Following the attacks of September 11th 2001, one of the resounding questions asked was "What would make anyone do such a thing?" The psychological mentality of the suicidal terrorist left a gaping hole in people's understanding. This essential volume represents a much-needed ef...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: Alderdice, Lord, contributor (contributor), Arundale, Jean, editor (editor), Covington, Coline, editor, Knox, Jean, editor, Williams, Paul, editor
Formato: Libro electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: London : Taylor and Francis 2018.
Edición:First edition
Materias:
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull:https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009798274706719
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • COVER; ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS; FOREWORD; CONTRIBUTORS; Introduction; TERRORISM; Introduction; CHAPTER ONE: Thoughts and photographs, World Trade Centre: 11th September 2001; CHAPTER TWO: The eleventh of September massacre; CHAPTER THREE: Thoughts on September 11th, 2001; CHAPTER FOUR: Beyond bombs and sanctions; CHAPTER FIVE: From containment to leakage, from the collective to the unique: therapist and patient in shared national trauma; CHAPTER SIX: The psychodynamic dimension of terrorism; CHAPTER SEVEN: Reflections on the making of a terrorist; HATRED, ENMITY AND REVENGE; Introduction
  • CHAPTER EIGHT: On hatred: with comments on the revolutionary, the saint, and the terroristCHAPTER NINE: The role of hatred in the ego; CHAPTER TEN: Fundamentalism and idolatry; CHAPTER ELEVEN: The benign and malignant other; WHY WAR?; Introduction; CHAPTER TWELVE: Freud/Einstein correspondence; CHAPTER THIRTEEN: Jung correspondence: letter to Dorothy Thompson; CHAPTER FOURTEEN: Thoughts for the times on war and death: a psychoanalytic address on an interdisciplinary problem; CHAPTER FIFTEEN: Psychoanalysis and war; Psychoanalysis and war-response to Diana Birkett
  • CHAPTER SIXTEEN: Psychological defence and nuclear warCHAPTER SEVENTEEN: Silence is the real crime; THE AFTERMATH OF WAR; Introduction; CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: Destructiveness, atrocities and healing: epistemological and clinical reflections; CHAPTER NINETEEN: Omagh: the beginning of the reparative impulse?; CHAPTER TWENTY: The transgenerational transmission of holocaust trauma: Lessons learned from the analysis of an adolescent with obsessive compulsive disorder; CHAPTER TWENTY ONE: The holocaust and the power of powerlessness: survivor guilt an unhealed wound
  • CHAPTER TWENTY TWO: Exile and bereavementForget; GLOSSARY; BIBLIOGRAPHY AND REFERENCES