| Our Need of Taboo: Pictures of Violence
and Mourning Difficulties by Andrzej Werbart |
|
In memory of Lajos Szekely Can
everything be depicted? Where has the boundary been drawn for what is
permissible? When is the description of reality no longer ethical? What
inner need in man leads to his effort to go repeatedly beyond the boundaries
of the permissible, to see all and show all? And what are the consequences
for our psyche, for our inner life, of new technical approaches by which
pictures of what is happening in various places in the world can be spread
so rapidly, without regard to distance? Questions like this are being
posed today not only by professional opinion-makers but also by the man
in the street, who is confronted by pictures of violence, suffering, death
and perversion even in the sanctity of his home. Psychoanalytical experience
is not ineffectual in the face of these questions even if it can not offer
firm backing for a pronouncement about how it really is today or
how it ought to be. Our specific knowledge can help us to identify
the wishes and fantasies in operation at times when we are fascinated
by or feel loathing for various descriptions of violence, may they be
fiction or an alleged description of what is happening here and now. These
highly private wishes and fantasies are part of our universal dreams which
recur in various disguises throughout the whole history of mankind.
Descriptions
of violence are as old as man’s ability to describe what is happening
around and within himself, from cave paintings through Greek myths, Homer’s
epic, the Bible, to present-day news reports from Bosnia, violent films
and, pornography. In all probability the prohibition against describing
certain facts is old as the capacity to do so. The prototype of this taboo
was the prohibition against naming and describing the God of the Judaism.
As with every prohibition, its origin is the antithesis – the cult of
images, the idolatry. My working hypothesis is that pictures of violence,
like pictures of sexuality, are in our culture the objects of an ancient
taboo. Man’s relation to his own ability to name and depict, to be
his own witness, has always been ambiguous. The name and the image have
taken on magical significance, and to name or depict has been a mystical
way taking possession of ”the reality”. We can see clear traces of this
in children’s play – there is nothing inexplicable or traumatic in the
child’s world which the child does not attempt to master by reproducing
the incident within the secure framework of play.
The
demoralising influence of depiction on man has been discussed since antiquity
and in Plato’s ideal state all forms of mimetic art were to be forbidden.
Regardless of the medium it uses or to whom it is addressed, art has always
been an attempt to describe man’s relation to his taboo, to the boundaries
he himself has staked out for himself. At the same time art is a way
to create, question, and break through another boundary, that between
reality and fantasy, between the portrayal and what is portrayed. Today’s
debate about reports of violence in the media once more raises the question
of man’s relation to the taboos he has created in his previous history.
New techniques have given us opportunities for an instant global communication
of messages. The medium has prevailed over the message (McLuhan 1964),
creating an illusion that there is no intermediate link, as if the picture
were no longer filtered through the psyche of others but could reach our
inner selves directly: images claim to replace immediate perception. The
images spread in this way deny that the ancient taboos against depicting
mankind’s violence and sexuality exist at all – or that there is an
psychic agent for taboo.
Taboo
and Violation Taking
obsessional neurosis as a model, Freud understands (1913; 1918) taboo
as a conscious prohibition against the fulfilment of the most powerful
unconscious desires and probably the earliest form of conscience. All
taboos have archaic roots; they are external prohibitions against strongly
desirable actions which were imposed on generations of primitive people.
So man’s thirst for blood and his appetite for murder have grown into
a blood and murder taboo. Obedience to taboos is a parallel to the child’s
obedience to this father and the desire to rebel against him. We all have
a strongly ambivalent attitude to taboos: we want nothing more than to
break with them but are at the same time afraid of doing so.
In
the story of the creation taboos do not have ethical roots; they are ontological.
At the beginning a difference arose. Differentiation was the original
act of creation. God separated day from night, heaven from earth, the
creator from the creation. Only God knew the difference. In the beginning
of man’s history there was a breach of taboo. Eating from the Tree of
Knowledge involved man’s desire to see the difference himself and attack
the distinction between God and man. History began with the punishment
of crime. East of the Garden of Eden the next crime was committed, Abel’s
murder by his brother. In our imagination sexuality and the thirst for
knowledge are linked to forbidden fruits. The same ambivalent relation,
the same unconscious desire to violate the prohibition, lie at the bottom
of science and perversion, man’s creativity and criminality. Man has taken
the liberty of putting the forbidden into ritualised forms, fenced in
by strict rules like the totem meal, the ecstatic rituals of antiquity,
the ”bread and theatre” of the Roman Empire, the carnival world à rebours.
The
most important function of taboo is to provide frames, to draw a line.
Every taboo establishes a boundary between the allowed and the forbidden,
between God and man, between the sacred and the profane, between what
may be touched and what may not be touched, between the living and the
non-living, between generations, sexes, permitted and forbidden food.
The taboo, the boundary, leaves room for the imagination, for fancies
about being able to do the forbidden. The imagined violation is an important
element in the satisfaction of every desire. The portrayal of the forbidden
gives pleasure only if it stimulates the imagination. Without imagination
the picture is flat and mechanical. The account which leaves no room for
fantasy dissolves the boundary around the fantasising, the day dream,
the game, the theatre, which needs to be created in order to make it into
”something else” than the world of everyday life. In the stories patients
tell of their experiences of the first psychotic break-down, the same
theme stubbornly recurs: having crossed a boundary. How does this boundary
originate? And what happens when it is crossed?
A
boundary, a frame, a shield The
first boundary we confront is that between the ego and the non-ego. Man’s
spiritual dimension, our psyche, may be regarded as a product of a boundary,
a separation. In the psychoanalytical tradition a number of concepts exist
which describe the dividing line between the ego and stimuli coming from
both outside and inside. According to Freud (1895b) trauma is a matter
of large amounts of excitation breaking through the ego’s protective barrier.
He describes depression (1895a; 1917a) as an ”open wound,” a ”hole in
the psychic sphere,” an ”inner bleeding” which empties the ego. Inwardly,
too, our psyche is structured by boundaries drawn between various instruments:
the conscious, the pre-conscious and the unconscious, or the id, the ego
and the superego. Freud (1920) compares the ”protective shield against
excitation” to a membrane or skin which takes on an inorganic character:
because the outer layer has ceased to be living, it saves all the deeper
layers from a similar fate. Anzieu (1985) has studied the psychic significance
of the skin as a boundary and a shield for the ego, a unifying and protective
”sack.” He coined the concept ”skin ego” whose function is to protect
and contain unconscious psychic phenomena in a way similar to the way
the skin protects and contains the body. From these reasoning we can say
that every act of violence, both psychic and physical, is directed
against the ego’s protective shield, the psychic skin, and concretely
against the victim’s skin and body orifices. This thesis, which is
linked to Freud’s statement that the model for all taboos is the touching
taboo, is also applicable to invasive accounts of violence and perversion.
Our
relation to our own ego and its boundaries is of dubious character.
On the one hand we strive to maintain the ego as an instrument of autonomy,
an active agent in our own lives, a centre for autonomous and ethical
action. On the other hand we all have a longing to transgress the ego’s
boundaries; these may be interpreted as an obstacle to another, freer
existence, going beyond the ego. We can experience the ego’s dissolution
in sleep and in dreams, by using various types of stimuli, by going to
the movies, enjoying nature or by having ecstatic religious or sexual
experiences. A flight too far from the limits of one’s own ego, as for
example into the drug culture, may end in violence, murder, chaos, and
the downfall of the individual.
One
boundary is that between fiction and reality. This boundary is
not determined once and for all. It changes with the development of the
individual and the culture. Often the boundary between fiction and reality
is ritualised, even if the crossing, the threshold, seems to be invisible.
The listeners gather around the bard and the tale can begin. ”Let’s play,”
say the children. The family gathers around the radio, the lights dim
at the movies, the curtain goes up at the theatre. We open the book and
can close it again. But we can never be sure. Of course, as children we
could call out to the marionette ”Look out!” when the enemy sneaked after
our hero, even if on another level we knew that it was ”only” a play at
a puppet theatre. In certain primitive cultures there was a great fear
of being photographed – the one who owned the picture had a magic power
over the person pictured. When the Scudder missiles exploded over Israel
in 1992 and were sent via TV directly into our living rooms, we needed
to remind ourselves that it was neither fireworks nor an exciting film.
Defying
this boundary between fiction and reality has always been the ambition
of great art. Sometimes the need to draw attention to the fact that it
is not a realistic picture of some kind of ”reality” has gotten the upper
hand, as in non-figurative art or the theatre of the absurd. Sometimes
the dominating ambition has been quite the opposite: to go for an alleged
”true reality,” even ”truer” than reality itself. Being at a rock concert
or a boxing match, watching a pornographic film or a newsreel picture
of children succumbing to thirst can give us the same feeling – it is
actually happening, ”in reality,” here and now.
This
boundary between fiction and reality, between ”as-if” and ”for real”,
between the portrayal and what is being portrayed, is constantly being
influenced by new narrative techniques and new communication tools. The
generation born before TV existed may be troubled by the fact that the
difference between a news report and a horror film is wiped out as one
flips channels. New electronic media, the stock example of which has become
virtual reality, shifts anew the boundary between fiction and reality,
between living and non-living. A four-year-old boy points at the TV screen
and says, ”That’s make-believe, isn’t it?” For him the question is as
natural in front of the TV as on the nursery school playground when he
wonders if an older playmate pushes him ”for real” or as a part of the
game. Never previously in the history of mankind, however, have we had
the same chances in our everyday lives to be anywhere in the world as
witnesses to the worst catastrophes, the most bestial murders, the most
horrifying war scenes. This may be perceived as if not only our homes
but our very egos were being invaded, and this starts up the ancient protective
mechanism, our psychic defences. When the account of reality is unendurable
we can make it ”fictive” by regarding it as something which is happening
”there” as ”only” a picture or something which is not ”here.” Our children
beg for confirmation, ”They don’t shoot like that in Sweden? Not in our
city, anyway? Not on our street? Not at us?”
There
is also a temptation to cross the boundary between good and evil. Our
memories of endless debates on moral issues from our teen-age years ,
often with various borderline cases as examples, may be a reminder of
this. In the world of fiction Faust as well as heroes of science fiction
personify our fascination with evil. We probably all bear within us a
wish, a fantasy, of a life ”beyond good and evil” (Nietzsche), beyond
the boundaries of our existence, with access to unlimited power and secret
forces. Recently it has been observed that it is not only film but also
newly released books for young people which to a greater and greater extent
deal with evil and death, without love, without anything good, without
explanation. Symptomatically enough, in these publications there is a
recurrence of the same remark the hero makes when caught in a vulnerable
situation: ”It was like a film.” This fascination with evil and power
is always linked to notions of boundary crossing, originally the wish
to go beyond the child’s helplessness and overstep the authority and prohibitions
of parents. This is also linked to the desire for immortality and a life
not governed by moral principles.
The
outermost limit for us is that between living and dead, between human
and non-human. Perhaps every use of violence implies that the other
person is de-humanised, robbed of his human dignity, regarded not as a
living and feeling subject but as an object of our lust and hate. There
is a hairline difference between two knights who are engaged in a life
and death struggle, but who at the same time recognise each others’ sovereignty,
and the undefeated hero battling evil embodied in a human figure. The
systematic annihilation of Jews presupposed that they had first been declared
and been regarded as non-human, vermin and contagion to be eradicated
– we still speak of ”the extermination” of the Jews.
The
boundaries between fiction and reality, between good and evil and between
living and dead are closely interwoven. When one is eliminated the other
follows along. The longing to cross the boundaries of one’s own ego is
also bound up with the desire to see all and show all. It soon
turns out that all of this deals with one aspect – a taboo-shrouded
aspect – at the expense of the connected whole we do not want to see or
show. This is the mechanism common to every boundary crossing – isolating
a fragment of our emotional life and ignoring the connected whole. In
this way the boundary which is to be crossed and eliminated is re-created.
At this point we can already formulate a preliminary hypothesis, viz.
that descriptions of violence and perversion may lead to traumatising
intra-psychic consequences if they penetrate the skin ego or contribute
to its dissolution. A condition for the psychological working through
of our experiences and conflicts is, on the contrary, the maintenance
of boundaries. In the psychoanalytical treatment situation the purpose
of the frames is to protect both the analyst and the analysand from the
destructiveness them both. Certain actions are taboo and under that mantle
everything can be expressed and named.
The
Perverse Universe The
desires and fantasies played back in the media today in the pictures of
violence are among the perverse components in each and every one of us
but they are also a depiction of the perverse aspects of our social life.
In the perverse universe there is no difference between ”as if” and ”make-believe”
and ”for real,” between fantasy and deed, between our inner, psychic reality
and the outside world. Everything is ”for fun” at the same time that it
is happening in reality. ”Beyond good and evil,” the dividing line between
living, human, and dead, non-human is erased. Chasseguet-Smirgel (1984;
1986; 1989) calls attention to the fact that the perverse scenario is
apt to be revived in a group context where the differences between individuals
are levelled out. According to her the distinguishing characteristic of
perversion is that differences between sexes and between generations are
erased. The differentiation which perversion attempts to obliterate revives,
however, in the middle of the perverse scenario which perpetually revolves
around power, control, and dominance or subjection. Man’s hybris is in
his longing to take the Creator’s place. Chasseguet-Smirgel sees perversion
as one of the ways to attempt to expand the boundaries of what is possible
and be set free from reality. (Creativity is another way). The perverse
temptation is to regard pregenital desires and satisfactions, accessible
to the little girl or boy, as equal or better than the adult’s genital
desires and activities. The antithesis of the perverse universe is the
three-dimensional Oedipal psyche: between mother and child there is the
father/reality itself which sets up an incest barrier. Separation and
differentiation are the cornerstones of the law.
Violence
and Destructiveness in our Inner World and in Society The
connection between our inner world and the society into which we are born
and which we ourselves create is a dark chapter in psychoanalytical theory.
Unless we approach this uncertain area, however, we can not answer the
opening questions. In Freud’s (1930) vision of man and society we find
violence as the basis of our existence on two levels. Here I mean the
violence in the uninhibited instinct and the violence which our culture
practices against the individual. Without a certain measure of compulsion
and restraint in the gratification of impulses, cultural institutions
can not be maintained, Freud says (1927, p. 7): ”One has, I think, to
reckon with the fact that there are present in all men destructive, and
therefore anti-social and anti-cultural, trends and that in a great number
of people these are strong enough to determinate their behaviour in human
society.” Social violence is represented within us as the superego. The
ego’s function is to find compromises between the unbridled pressures
of instinct, the outer world, and the restraints of the superego. (Freud
1933a.)
On
the initiative of the League of Nations Albert Einstein turned to Freud
in 1932 with the question, ”Why war?”. Freud (1933b) began his reply with
a reminder that in antiquity violence was the traditional way to solve
all conflicts and that the goal has always been to eliminate the adversary
entirely. Throughout the development of civilisation the violence of the
strong individual has been overcome by transferring power to a larger
unit, consolidated by emotional ties between its members. Group solidarity
can, however, lead to the disintegration of ego boundaries when the individual
joins a larger association to which he delegates his responsibility and
his conscience. When the leader replaces the ego ideal of the individual,
acts which were previously forbidden may appear to be permissible (Freud
1921). Man’s aggressive and destructive urges may be integrated with the
libido and work constructively, or be separated from it and given free
rein. Despite Freud’s celebrated scepticism, the exchange of letters with
Einstein breathed life into the belief that everything which promotes
civilisation and culture operates against war. The cornerstone of civilisation
is the universal prohibition against incest (Freud 1913). Even here we
return to the central role played by a boundary, a difference. Without
distinctions between different psychic agents, without a boundary between
our desires and our conscience, no compromises are possible.
Psychoanalytical
experience teaches us that periods of vast revolutionary changes are followed
by crises for the individual, albeit after a certain delay and after the
acute phase has passed. Bychowski (1968) shows convincingly how anxiety
and fear lead to hate within the individual and in the society – from
antiquity to the present day. During certain historical epochs, when large
groups of people have lost faith in the old solutions to their life problems,
in religion and other ideologies, and when the superego has degenerated,
a state of discontent, hopelessness and uncertainty arises. This releases
a psychological regression which activates infantile reaction patterns
and awakens a longing for a strong leader, a helping father. Starting
from Caesar, Cromwell, Robespierre, Hitler and Stalin Bychowski shows
how people who no longer believe in their own strength transfer all their
hope to the leader who promises salvation and a new faith in the future.
Following Freud’s line he points out that man’s wickedness, hate and destructiveness
find their best outlet when they serve man’s highest ideals. From another
perspective Hanna Arendt (1970) observed a displacement of violence to
the political arena after the time of the student revolt. According to
her, loss of power brings with it a temptation to replace it with violence
when violence is no longer supported and controlled by authority. On the
psychological plane there is a parallel in the feeling of powerlessness
which breeds rage and violence.
After
Auschwitz Despite
our humanistic ideals, love of our fellow man and concern for others,
there are in us all more or less distinct traces of the desire to make
others into non-us, and in the end into non-people. It is our own outraged
narcissism which reduces others to a non-human status and underlies ”the
Fascist mentality” (Bollas 1992). Fear of the different, on the other
side of our prescribed cairn, lays the foundation for xenophobia. Eissler
(1975) gives the name ”cultural narcissism” to that force which causes
us to overvalue our own national, political or religious affiliation,
leading to conflict and war. Green (1981) believes that every culture
builds on inherent paranoid processes: the distinctive character of the
culture is confirmed by the devaluation and rejection of another culture
often lying near at hand. Minority groups which deviate from our own group
in matters of religion, ethnical origin, political views, language or
sexuality are convenient projection screens for the intolerance of our
own weakness and aggressivity. The path the projection takes often follows
”the narcissism of small differences” (Freud 1918; 1921; 1930): the closest
neighbour is perceived as a threat to our own identity and survival and
the neighbour farther away seems to be nicer and more exciting. We meet
”strangers” on visits home. In Sweden we tell Norwegian stories but not
English or Russian stories. Yet as a matter of fact we do not eat up our
neighbours, we do not make lamp shades out of their skin and mattresses
out of their hair. Though all that has happened. Cannibalism, child murder
and human sacrifice are part of our prehistoric roots.
The
culture we live and feel discontent in originated in large measure from
the prohibition against doing what was once allowed, indeed even holy,
like sacrificing our children to the gods (Bergman 1992). These unconscious
murderous and cannibalistic desires have left indelible marks on the religious
rituals of the West. The murderous desires of children against parents
(the Oedipus complex) and the murderous desires of parents against children
(the Laius complex) are, according to Bergman, interwoven with each other
as components in the existential conditions of mankind. But there are
historical experiences of a much more recent date. We live in a world
after Auschwitz. Our parents have been there or could have been, in one
way or another. They knew or did not want to know. Our children are the
third generation after the mass use of the gas chamber and the cremation
ovens, after all the taboos were abolished once again – not as an exception,
as a crime, but as a systematic operation with both bureaucratic and industrial
overtones.
Without our really knowing how, the Holocaust and death factories
have influenced our conscious and unconscious ideas, our super egos, our
desires and our terrors. The technology of death and the cult of the death’s-head
have not been a parenthesis in history leaving no traces. The perverse,
seductive, paranoid father – the Führer – has been replaced by our ideas
about the fatherless society, by the absence of the Law of the Father.
Fifty years after Auschwitz we are complaining about the absence of adults
to see, set limits and say no. The confusion between generations is said
to characterise our Zeitgeist. The middle-aged generation, born
in the time of Auschwitz and Hiroshima, refuse to give up their own eternal
youth. At the same time the younger generation, the third, take over adult
roles too early. To formulate that in the dualistic terms of Freudian
instinct theory: the strained acceptance of libido, of Eros, turns into
its opposite, the cult of death, and Thanatos looms in the wake of longing
to subvert the boundaries of the ego. In
Adorno’s widely quoted phrasing, it is impossible to write poems after
Auschwitz. It has often been said that it is not possible to imagine or
depict the Holocaust. The taboo against pictures and descriptions of the
Holocaust have, however, never existed – all the art created in hiding
places, the ghettos and concentration camps bear witness to this. On the
contrary, I would like to assert that Auschwitz demolished the taboo against
describing certain phenomena. Both the crossing of boundaries between
good and evil, human and non-human, living and dead, and ”ignorance” of
this have been replaced not only by the desire but also the technology
to see all and show all. Today we would be able to witness the consequences
of Zyklon B in a direct broadcast. There is logic in this: that at
the same time as the Holocaust is being denied there are no longer
any limits for what can be depicted – and neither perhaps for what
may be done so that it will be depicted. No doubt it is more difficult
to create poetry after Auschwitz – it requires an effort to restore the
boundary between fiction and reality, between the portrayal and what is
portrayed.
After
the Collapse of the Berlin Wall As
I pointed out at the start, psychoanalysis does not provide us with any
basis for comment on political change but only on the unconscious desires
and defences brought into focus by the change. Let us take the Berlin
Wall as a symbol. On one side of the wall we had ”the good” Europeans
or Germans and on the other ”the bad.” This distortion of reality was
based on the defence mechanisms of denial, splitting and projection, well
known to psychoanalysts from the individual inner scene, which taken together
seriously jeopardise the reality testing. But the collapse of the wall
is not only a victory for democracy. It is also a threat to the psychic
survival of every East German; the depression which struck many citizens
of the former East Germany has been noted by several writers. The old
defences do not function; the ego ideal has changed key. Two paths are
accessible to the individual: the painful confrontation with his own emotional
reactions to the new state of things or flight from his affliction through
new denials, splittings and projections. The various outcomes of this
identity crisis are dependent not only on the ability of each individual
to mourn his own inner lost object but also on the models he finds in
the prevailing culture. We can also take the former Soviet Union and Yugoslavia
as examples. The aspect I want to call attention to is ”the taboo” against
national conflicts. These multinational hybrids were possible because
of the same psychic mechanisms of denial, splitting and projection. There
were no conflicts between nations inside their own borders, only outside
them. When the outer ”curtain” has been perforated we can observe what
Freud (1896) described as the return of the repressed. The
world after the collapse of the Berlin Wall has sometimes been compared
to the Middle Ages: several small centres, local power structures, the
disintegration of the central authority. Denial, splitting and projection
can no longer follow the simple east- west path. When these mechanisms,
primitive but structuring for the ego, no longer function in the same
way, the ego risks being flooded by archaic, violent and perverse impulses.
When hate and envy are not held back by taboo, there is scope for uninhibited
killing. The need for order and new psychic defences becomes acute, and
this may lead to a perverted reconstruction of frames, characterised
by paranoid delusions. ”Ethnic cleansing” may here serve as an example
from the political arena. The prohibition against hybris, against mixing,
is then revived as a perverse decree to uphold absolute cleanliness.
At the same time another change has been going on with consequences for
our inner life and our culture which up to now have been difficult to
assess. Modern media technology can give us an illusion of direct presence
in the centre of events. We can sit at home and on the TV screen follow
the advance of the troops over the desert on the border between Kuwait
and Iraq. Through our computers we can make direct contact with a colleague
in the besieged Sarajevo. On the one hand this can give us a feeling of
omnipotence and on the other hand of powerlessness and unreality. The
new technical means of extending the range of our sense and motor organs
confronts our psyche with new demands on our ability to test reality and
defend ourselves against overstimulation, to weed out unessential
information. It is a classic psychoanalytical thesis that our culture,
our civilisation, is based on repression. At the same time it is only
the intellectual and economic elite who have the resources to set priorities
independently on the flood of information, using the minimal, absolutely
essential part. For the great majority the result may be traumatic overstimulation
and the defences which accompany it, like encapsulation, screening, ego
restrictions, etc. Until new boundaries between the inner and the outer
are established the distinction between reality and illusion will remain
indistinct. Natural disasters, such as for example the earthquake in Kobe,
may be required to remind the Japanese stock market that the information
world is not the only reality we live in. The
Limits of Boundary Crossing The
inner, psychic processes described above, bolstered by changes in the
social arena and in the area of media technique, coincide in time and
strengthen each other. At the same time as the limitless state of things
appears to be an ideal, development here meets its own border. The desire
to overstep and obliterate the boundaries of the ego, to break with taboos,
is an important incentive to portrayals of man’s destructiveness and sexuality.
Crossing a boundary is possible only if there is a boundary to cross.
Beyond the boundary everything is allowed. Passing a geographical border,
leaving one’s own country, is often the equivalent of leaving behind the
restrictions of one’s own superego. As soon as they are on board the ferry
from Sweden, young people begin to drink without restraint and on the
boat from Finland Finish youth do the same. When the culturally accepted
boundaries for the permissible are shifted, the content of actions and
pictures which were intended to challenge the taboos is also affected.
Since accounts of man’s destructiveness and sexuality adapt themselves
to this they must tempt us with promises that we may be allowed to see
something which has never before been witnessed, more genuine, more real,
more harrowing. The indignation or the excitation which the depiction
of violence is intended to arouse demands new, bolder pictures. This inflation
of the crossing of boundaries finally leaves us bored and indifferent:
still one more picture of the wounded in the Sarajevo food queues, yet
another series of blurred pictures of stretchers, the focus on the pools
of blood on the ground. Paradoxically enough the taboo needs to be recreated
so that we will be able to enjoy or be horrified at seeing and giving
a name to the forbidden. TV news broadcasts warn us of shocking and violent
pictures. The advertising for VCR films tempts us with an uncut version
– more blood and sperm. The dialectic of boundary crossing is that
it restores the prohibition which was to be abolished.
In the unconscious, crimes against taboos are punishable by the death
penalty. For us humans the ultimate boundary transgression is our own
death and that of others, the irreversible crossing. The temptation
and desire to cross boundaries is linked to the sexualisation of death
and the mortification of sexuality. The object of pictures of violence
and pornography is always killed symbolically, transformed from a living,
feeling subject to a dead thing, a waste product. The viewer of these
portrayals goes through a corresponding transformation: his sensitivity
and his ability to empathise with others have to be blunted and parts
of his own subjectivity put between parentheses. This transition may be
surrounded by protective rituals: the spectators gather at the Colosseum
and the emperor declares the gladiatorial games open; we put the cassette
into the VCR and settle ourselves comfortably on the sofa. When there
is no refuge, when suddenly at breakfast we are served bodies twisting
in death agonies or orgiastic spasms we are ourselves the subjects of
violence. Our inner selves are outraged. We can turn away or continue
to watch without seeing. The picture loses its substance, becomes a shadow
play without reference to anything outside the picture. The symbolic meaning
is killed. The eagerly awaited excitation in watching what is not allowed
to be shown is transformed into distaste and boredom (Bruckner & Finkielkraut
1977) as a consequence of scotomas which characterise perverse scenarios.
The new pornographers, violating man’s ultimate, decisive separateness,
do our fantasy work for us, Steiner (1967) writes in his essay, ” Night
Words.” In this way we consent to being dispossessed of our own fantasies.
What tempts us is that we believe we are overcoming death. Fascination
with Violence and Escape from Suffering and Mourning Accounts
of violence and perversion promise us that we will be vicariously freed
from the shackles of our own consciences and social norms, that we will
at last realise ourselves to the fullest. They promise to tear down all
the prohibitions which have hitherto limited our chances. The less comprehensible
the reason for violence seems to be, the more devoid of all emotional
connections the perverse acts are, the stronger our positive or negative
reactions are. Turned on or dismayed, we let ourselves be cheated. Foucault
(1976) concludes the first volume of ”The History of Sexuality”: The irony
of this deployment is in having us believe that it concerns our ‘liberation’.”
These ever more sophisticated or realistic direct accounts leave a feeling
of emptiness, satiation and disgust in their wake. The promised liberation
never comes, regardless of whether we regard it as an apocalypse or a
Paradise on earth. The insurmountable boredom of pictures of violence
catches up with us. In Freud’s (1923, p. 46) description ”the death instincts
are by their nature mute” and ”the clamour of life proceeds for the most
part from Eros”. In the superego of the melancholic ”a pure culture of
the death instinct” reigns supreme (Freud 1923, p. 53). When perpetual
repetitions of the same actions are presented without their historical
and emotional context they lose their relationship to the conditions of
our human existence and with our roots. Thus the depression recurs which
the picture of violence, like every boundary crossing, has been passed
off as helping us to escape. This void, covering up our own violent, destructive
desires, is a pathological form of sorrow from a psychoanalytical standpoint,
an expression of the inability or refusal to suffer and to mourn. The
desire to escape every limitation in man’s existence ends in depression
or destructiveness. Sabina Spielrein, who in 1912 suggested the first
psychoanalytical phraseology for the death instinct, wrote that the most
important characteristic of an individual is that he is a ”dividual,”
Dividuum. Wurmser (1987) sees man’s claim to the absolute as ”the
perversion of conscience” – it fosters the ”demonic” side of the personality
and leads to evil, destructiveness and violence. According to Shengold
(1991) our original desire for ”everything” is an expression of the utmost
narcissism, and it makes ”something” unattainable. Our murderous desires
express a rage which turns against the inevitably frustrating reality
we live in, represented by the indispensable parents. Only a tolerance
for ”no,” ”never” and ”nothingness” can create a real place where it is
possible for ”someone” to exist as a separate individual with his own
identity.
The psychoanalytical term ”the omnipotence of thought” can help us to
understand the effects of the spread of accounts of violence in the media.
The concept was coined by one of Freud’s patients, known as the Ratman
(1909) and used by Freud in his research on taboo (1913). What the magic
thoughts of small children, obsessive neurotic patients and people in
primitive cultures have in common is that the thought is considered to
be on a par with the deed. The distinctive mark of the new, global media
is that it so easily brings up to date this archaic, infantile ”omnipotence
of thought” and in that way promotes narcissistic solutions. In its turn
this narcissism is an effective obstacle to – and a flight from – perceived
suffering, depression, mourning and working through. Added to this is
also the disintegration of the individual conscience by participation
in the global network of viewers. In Freud’s research on taboo the
archetype for this process was the primitive man’s totem meal when the
totem animal was killed and eaten: every individual is aware that he is
doing something forbidden, allowed only because the whole clan is participating
in it.
According to Freud (1913) man’s cultural products are a first acknowledgement
of Ananke, ”Necessity”, in the sense of limitations inherent in
the existential conditions of man which challenge our narcissism. In this
context it could be added that the relation of art to ”Necessity” has
always been ambivalent. Every innovative work of art, like every new medium,
is an effort to subjugate Ananke, overstep the boundaries in our
earthly existence and re-establish a narcissistic structure. Art which
ends there, however, will not be art; not until it reaches a bottom layer
of depression can it help us to mourn. Subtle ties bind creativity to
our narcissistic and depressive sides (Székely 1976; 1983; Haynal 1985;
Kristeva 1987; Cullberg 1992; Crafoord 1993). Narratives which deal in
depth with our existential conditions, with what makes us humans irretrievably
doomed to live as separate ”in-dividuals”, dependent on each other, divided
into two sexes and several generations, vulnerable and mortal, can help
us to be reconciled with our existential conditions. A painful acknowledgement
of Ananke is also an important part of the psychotherapeutic process
of change. Let me illustrate this with three clinical vignettes and a
film. Three
Patients and Three COLOURS The
first girl’s colours were brown. Brown’s inner world was filled with terror
and perversion. She could sit for hours in front of the TV and watch the
most brutal and cruel violent and pornographic films. Before the approaching
termination of her psychotherapy Brown fantasised butchering her therapist
and cutting up her dead mother. There was no limit to Brown’s hate for
her therapist and her mother, both of whom had unavoidably left her. Her
own progress in therapy and in life confronted her with the need to accept
that, as a matter of fact, she was able to look after herself on her own.
When she took a decisive step in that direction she regressed and in confusion
went out to her mother’s grave. On the way back she met with the same
type of accident which had led to her mother’s death. By identifying with
her mother she was trying to understand her mother’s death and accept
the fact that she had nothing to do with it, at the same time as she was
trying to ”be” the mother. Brown teetered on the brink of death and had
to go through a series of surgical procedures. After one of the operations
she thought that she had finally buried her mother and freed herself from
her. Before the conclusion of the therapy she hit on the idea that she
might go to another psychotherapist and this made her feel like a traitor.
She had a whim that she might plant the same kind of potted plant as the
one in the therapist’s consulting room. Perhaps it would bloom for her,
too, and then she could cut a flower and give it to the therapist. Actually
she was still grappling with the separation from her mother’s body and
expressing a hope that she would be able to refrain from butchering and
eating it. She could not keep the good plant herself but imagined that
she had to pick the flower and give it back to the therapist, a representative
of her mother. Before the next operation a few weeks later she mixed up
ideas about the dead mother’s mangled body with fantasies about cutting
up her own body and that of the therapist. The therapist who had survived
these onslaughts received a postcard after the operation which had on
it a picture of the flower Brown wanted to plant, cut and give to her.
That moment might be described as a transition from the Fascist mentality
and the brown anal universe to a world where the difference between Brown
and others and between the symbol and what is symbolised may be allowed
to exist. The
second girl’s colours were pink. Pink’s fear of her own destructiveness
was hidden behind an idyllic facade. She was a sweet innocent, a china
doll. As Pink approached the end of her therapy she wanted to make the
process short. Apparently she perceived the upcoming separation as a sign
of the therapist’s sadism. Her own sadism continued to be denied and projected.
At this point Pink’s fantasies revolved around the desire to hold the
female therapist’s hand when a man penetrated her. With their long knives
men were nasty creatures. With the therapist she constantly re-created
a feeling that there was always something more to work with which she
was not allowing the therapist to penetrate. Pink could not endure the
difference between the bodies of a man and a woman, between parent and
child generations, between patient and therapist, and she also did everything
she could to deny the boundary created by the termination. She thought
that psychotherapy was not worth anything if it was really going to end
by the therapist and her being separated. Everything was ruined and it
was just as well to begin slashing her wrists and burning herself with
cigarettes. She thought that it helped her to feel real if she saw blood
flowing. During one therapy session she stuck her fingertip with a needle,
squeezing out a few drops of blood that she wanted the therapist to suck
on. In this action Pink’s vampirism mingled with fantasies about the therapist’s
bloodthirstiness. At the same time Pink was more and more openly seductive
toward the therapist, alternating between inviting physical contact and
reproaching her for the lack of it. Not until the therapist became aware
of her own strongly negative reactions to Pink’s bloodthirstiness and
her homosexual invitations was she able to understand that at every session
Pink was giving her the feeling that she was leaving something unfinished
and unprocessed behind and that Pink’s motivation was to get the therapist
to realise how impossible the upcoming separation seemed to her. This
became the starting point for a new round in her work with Pink’s refusal
to live in a world of differences.
Green, a middle-aged woman who looked like a teenager, was concerned about
environmental destruction. The very first sessions of psychoanalysis aroused
her dread of the future termination. She could not understand why she
should embark on this relationship if she could not ”get” the analyst
and she complained constantly about the lack of mutuality in the relationship.
For several years Green reacted to every separation from the analyst with
hateful feelings and murderous fantasies, such as butchering and eating
her body. Despite the violent quality in her emotions, dreams, fantasies
and accusations Green did not need to stage them in her real life or assault
her own body, nor did she need to hide her desires behind a facade of
innocence and naiveté. She could speak openly about her reactions and
her desires remained simply desires. The months before the end of the
analysis were characterised by a profound mourning made possible when
ambivalent emotions were allowed to come out. Green came to the final
session with a gift for her analyst which in symbolic form summed up the
inner change she had gone through but was also a symbolic representation
of a funeral. She was able to give up the illusion that her desire to
have the father/analyst to herself would finally be satisfied after the
termination, and she buried her fantasy picture.
Brown’s and Pink’s colours seemed like the reverse of each other
but they both lived in the same archaic universe where their bodies and
those of their mothers had grown together. Sometimes Green’s colours might
seem brown and sometimes pink. Even though she protested vehemently against
every difference between her and the analyst, between her own and her
mother’s relation to her father, she could present her own conflicts in
symbolic form. Certainly in her analysis she regressed to the same archaic
universe in which Brown and Pink permanently inhabited, but in contrast
to the two other patients her starting point was a deep depression and
not a psychosis. In all three cases violence and perversion disclosed
their demands to obliterate all differences. A
Film ”No
animals or human beings have been injured in creating this film,” we are
assured after Milcho Manchevski’s film ”Before the Rain.” We can feel
secure that everything was just fiction, ”make believe.” Photographer
and Pulitzer prize winner Alex is on a trip to Bosnia as a newspaper correspondent
after 16 years in London. On one occasion he observes to a Serbian militiaman,
”Nothing is happening here.” ”We can easily fix that,” answers the militiaman
and shoots a prisoner. In this scene the boundary between fiction and
reality is dissolved when the desire for an authentically shocking picture
determines what becomes real.
Weighed down by guilt feelings, Alex travels to Macedonia where he wishes
to make amends for his crime by trying to rescue the daughter of his youthful
love. He winds up in the middle of a feud between Albanians and Macedonians
(”they have oppressed us for 500 years”) and witnesses how a brother murders
his sister, an Albanian girl charged with having killed a Macedonian.
He is finally killed by his own brother. In the first part of the film,
”Words,” we get no explanations for all the hate and violence we are witness
to. Part two, ”Faces,” transports us to London only so that we may once
again witness something incomprehensible. In a restaurant a Yugoslav picks
a quarrel with a fellow countryman, insulting him until he is thrown out.
In a few minutes he comes back and mows down the restaurant guests. The
explanation does not come until the third part, ”Pictures.” Here we see
a Macedonia where next door neighbours are full of hate for each other
and we follow the fateful course of events in connection with Alex’ rescue
attempt. As in a Greek tragedy it proves to be impossible for Alex, for
all of us, to stay out of things and circumvent fate: when Alex fights
to preserve his own humanity he puts at stake the life of the girl he
was to rescue as well as his own.
The whole film may be considered an exposé of the difference between
the viewer of incomprehensible descriptions of violence without
meaning or relation and the witness to meaningful and comprehensible
actions, however strange and frightening, being the consequence of a long
and not immediately recognisable story. Shocking pictures from the war
scene skimmed through in a London office, completely unacceptable in their
invasion of everyday life, come gradually to be replaced by ”faces” of
people, their fates, the coherence of life. The violence in the epic story
of the film with its dazzlingly beautiful, almost dreamlike pictures,
is contrasted with extremely realistic pictures from Bosnia, reaching
us at the same moment they are happening, invading us without giving us
any connection or possibility to understand. The highly personal, stylised
tale, filtered through the psyche of another subject, gives us a feeling
of participation in our common human history. Within the frame of a ritually
limited time and place we meet our own and our neighbour’s destructiveness
and once again discover that there is nowhere to flee. This family of
ours who inhabit the earth are brothers and sisters who are killing each
other. Pictures
of Violence and Perversion are Different From Images of Conditio Humana Now
that we have gotten so far into this discourse we may need to go back
to some of the theses we formulated earlier and elaborate further on them.
Our contemporary descriptions of man’s violence, destruction and sexuality
destroy the boundaries between reality and fantasy, between the portrayal
and what is portrayed, between good and evil, living and dead, human and
non-human. This plays a part in our longing to cross the boundaries of
our own ego. In combination with denying that a taboo against portrayal
of certain occurrences exists at all, these pictures present a perverse
scenario, which may bring into focus corresponding aspects of our inner
world. The preoccupation with violence and perversion in our culture can
be regarded as a consequence of secularisation, the victory of rationality
over faith, and a continuation of the disintegration of the boundary between
sacred and profane. Nietzsche and Dostoyevsky articulated this perception
of Gott ist tot: if God is dead all crimes and perversions are
allowed. After
Auschwitz our culture was to a great extent characterised by the desire
to see all and show all and by a denial of the boundaries for what may
be depicted and what may be done. This involves a change in our relation
to the ultimate limit of our existence, death. Great ambivalence characterises
the cult of death which is continuing its advance in the shadow of the
gas chambers and the crematorium ovens. On the one hand the taboo surrounding
death seems to have been strengthened and on the other hand eliminated.
Much of the concrete, physical content of death has been rendered invisible
at the same time as pictures of dead and dying bodies are inundating us.
We seem to be denying that our own death and that of others is one of
the realities of life and a ”beyond,” at the same time as we violate previous
taboos surrounding death and the images of it. If death is not a final
crossing and if pictures of murder and corpses are a common ingredient
of our daily lives, perhaps there is nothing we need to be afraid of and
nothing to mourn, either. This cult of death seems to be an attempt to
come to terms with the narcissistic outrage perpetrated on us by the fact
that we are mortal. Present
day techniques for the spread of information has extended the range of
our sense and motor organs to a level which spans the globe. This global
expansion of boundaries of the outer organs of the ego has not been
accompanied by a corresponding change in our ego. The skin ego, the outer
shield of our body image and our inner world, is lagging behind. This
state of things resembles adolescence: the teenager’s body changes faster
than his chances of integrating it into his self-image, at the same time
as the radical increase in the pressure of his instincts triggers regression.
In contrast to the teenager, however, what we are talking about here is
not a matter of the increased pressure of the libido but of the death
instinct. The result is that we once again meet the archaic, infantile
sides of our selves, this time under the hegemony of hate and destructiveness.
Changes in the social arena and in the scope of the media coincide and
together strengthen the regressive psychic processes, which have also
been apparent in other epochs of historic upheavals. The
effect of exposure to pictures of violence and perversion may be described
in terms of regression to narcissistic structures. Another consequence
was the mortification of our psyche, a process which may be said to chisel
out the ”living dead” parts of our ego. Effects like these have previously
been observed in a pure form in people who have survived a perverted world
full of destructiveness, violence and evil – the survivors of the Holocaust,
of torture and psychosis (Werbart & Lindbom-Jakobson 1993). The preliminary
hypothesis that pictures of violence and sexuality may have traumatising
intrapsychic consequences if they penetrate or contribute to the disintegration
of the skin ego can now be confirmed. A massive exposure to images of
man’s evil and perversion, devoid of every emotional and historical context,
may activate our ”archaic remnants.” Our own destructiveness and narcissism
then come to life rather than being diverted and canalised. This may lead
to a temporary or persistent reorganisation of the ego. The appeal of
these images and the regression they conjure up lie in the fact that the
projection outward of our own aggressivity and hate is accompanied by
flight from depression and grief, manifest in the ecstatic expectation
of being able to free ourselves from all the boundaries in our existence.
This regression in the individual and in the group can be carried over
from generation to generation (Kaës et al. 1993).
What then is the difference between pictures of violence and perversion
which serve the ends of the death instinct and accounts which promote
the action of the life instinct in joining together instead of tearing
down? One difference is between pictures which isolate a fragment of our
life, ignoring its total emotional and historical context, and accounts
which are incorporated into a human story. Another difference is between
showing or viewing, and witnessing. This difference deals with the
presence or absence of a Narrator, an intermediate agent who is responsible
for a certain psychic and symbolic pre-processing. The tales of the
Greek bards, the Bible stories, the Islandic Edda and Völsungasagan
or the Finnish Kalevala are not devoid of atrocities, but they
are presented by someone who witnesses, relates and mediates. With the
modern technique for the spread of information, the Narrator tends to
become invisible and to be replaced by the medium. The mediating instrument
seeks to obliterate the subject’s presence as an intermediate link in
order to be seen as a neutral extension of our perceptual organs. Unprocessed,
non-symbolised pictures are still not testimony, for that requires a narrative
communicated through another person’s subjectivity. The portrayals which
”rape” us are pictures without a tie to experience, empty of suffering,
pain, meaning, and message. Behind the undoctored images of violence and
perversion is an incapacity to endure suffering and psychic pain – in
reality a refusal to accept mankind’s existential conditions. In psychoanalytical
terms it deals with an attempt to make the Oedipal third invisible
or to eliminate it. Such pictures play along with our desire to cross
the boundaries of our own ego and confirm the ego’s temporary or permanent
disintegration. Pictures of violence and perversion included in a description
of conditio humana, on the other hand, contribute to the re-establishment
of the ego as a psychic agent of our self-government.
To
Re-establish the Ego is to Restore Differences The
world we live in, the incomprehensible events occurring all around us,
all the dangers to our own existence as individuals and as a species,
constantly threaten the ego’s unity. When pictures of naked violence,
the free outlet for murderous and perverse desires, are perceived as invasive
and perforate the skin ego, the entire arsenal of our ancient defence
mechanisms is activated. Besides denial, projection and splitting, I have
mentioned such defences against traumatic overstimulation as encapsulation,
screening, and ego restriction. The sense of our vulnerability and our
own murderous desires are both so threatening to us that, faced with pictures
of this kind, we may react by ”de-identifying ourselves,” keeping a distance,
regarding reality as fiction, de-humanising others. This is not true;
it can’t be like this. It is happening there, not here. It is they who
are doing it, not us. They are not like us; they are different. ”They
are only Jews,” as an eye witness to the liquidation of the ghetto expressed
it in Steven Spielberg’s film, ”Schindler’s List.” It’s just a movie,
not for real. The use of these defence mechanisms is facilitated by the
pretended transparency of the new media. ”This is exactly how it is...”
When the presence of the mediating agent is made invisible and the re-editing
by the ”third” subject is denied, we can protect the unity of our ego
by contrariwise looking upon the portrayal as completely opaque. There
is nothing beyond the presentation; the medium itself is the message.
In the end it is the murderer within ourselves, the bloodthirsty beast
we do not want to know. As in neurosis and psychosis a massive use of
our most primitive, rigid defences contributes to strengthening the effect
of what we are defending ourselves against. This may lead to a perverted
reconstruction of frames, characterised by paranoid delusions. When
the taboo against portrayal of certain occurrences is denied, that which
we do not want to know can be fully possible.
In the current debate about the mass media in the USA, a paradox
has recently come to light. It seems that everyone follows Simpson’s trial
in direct TV broadcasts. This murder affects the entire population since
they can recognise themselves in the drama and identify with both the
perpetrator and the victim. The pictures from Serbia, on the other hand,
do not seem to affect the American public and are regarded as just pictures
on the TV screen. The spread of pictures of violence by the media may
contribute to the identification process (like the broadcasts of the hunt
for and the trial of Simpson) or to de-humanisation and the onset of xenophobia
(”We never believed anything else about the Balkan people”). Our attempt
at ”objective news reporting” may contribute to this de-humanisation.
Inexplicable pictures of bleeding, maimed or dead bodies, often in direct
broadcasts, may easily strengthen the feeling of unreality.
Pictures of evil, violence, destructiveness, and perversion may
contribute to the re-establishment of the ego’s boundaries if they counteract
the disintegration of the ego and restore differences. In order that they
may help us to work through our experiences, to endure suffering and to
mourn, such descriptions have to fulfil certain conditions. The subjective
position, with the portrayal separated from what is being portrayed, may
make it easier for us to identify with one of the protagonists. The narrator’s
visible presence, the mediating agent responsible for a certain psychic
pre-processing, can contribute to our leaving the role of the passive
viewer and becoming an active witness. This also promotes the symbolisation
and reconstruction of a historic context. Such accounts can help us to
accept the loss of our infantile omnipotence.
In
Freud’s (1917b) aphorism one of the great injures to the narcissism of
man is that our ego is not master in its own house. Changes in our culture,
in the political arena and the technology of the spread of information
work together today to influence the boundaries between our ego and the
outside world, between our ego ideal and perceived self-esteem, between
the desirable and the undesirable aspects of our inner world. This is
a new outrage to our narcissism. Our impulses, desires and fantasies are
the same as they were ten thousand years earlier. Never before, however,
has our repressed, archaic world had the same chance not only to break
through to the surface but also to be rapidly spread over the whole world
and shared by everyone. The boundary between the festivals of the Ancient
Age or the carnivals of the Middle Ages and the every day life was circumscribed
by a train of rules and ceremonies. The bard and the story teller could
extend the range of our sense and motor organs because his ego was the
mediating link. With the technology of today these boundaries are indistinct
and the mediating subject is reduced to a minimum. Modernism, post-modernism,
deconstruction have had the goal of breaking with various taboos, crossing
boundaries, mixing what previously could not be mixed. For the archaic
stratum in our ego the message that everything may be depicted may take
on the meaning that everything may also be done. In the world we live
in today several different technological and cultural factors work together
to activate the archaic and perverse sides of our personalities. All those
who are depicting our passage and our fate on this earth are involved
in this process of the breakthrough of archaic material. Restoring the
ego involves restoring our ancient taboos and re-establishing differences
between fiction and reality, between good and evil, the permissible and
the forbidden, living and dead, human and non-human.
References Anzieu,
D. (1985). The Skin Ego: A Psychoanalytic Approach to the Self.
New Haven & London 1989: Yale Univ. Press. Arendt,
H. (1970). On Violence. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World. Bergman,
M. S. (1992). In the Shadow of Moloch: The Sacrifice of Children and
its Impact on Western Religions. New York: Columbia Univ. Press. Bollas,
Ch. (1992). Being a Character: Psychoanalysis and Self Experience.
London: Routledge. Bruckner,
P. & Finkielkraut, A. (1977). Le nouveau désordre amoureux.
Paris: Éd. du Seuil. Bychowski,
G. (1968). Evil in Man: The Anatomy of Hate and Violence. New York
& London: Grune & Straton. Chasseguet-Smirgel,
J. (1984). Creativity and Perversion. New York: Norton & Co.
–––––
(1986). Sexuality and Mind: The Role of the Father and the Mother in
the Psyche. New York: New York Univ. Press. –––––
(1989). Perversion and the universal law. In Dimensions of Psychoanalysis.
ed. J. Sandler. Madison, CT: Int. Univ. Press, pp. 177-91. Crafoord,
C. (1993). Barndomens återkomst: En psykoanalytisk och litterär studie
(The Return of Childhood: A Psychoanalytical and Literary Study). Stockholm:
Natur & Kultur. Cullberg,
J. (1992). Skaparkriser: Strindbergs Inferno och Dagermans (Creative
Crises: Strindberg’s Inferno – and Dagerman’s). Stockholm: Natur &
Kultur. Eissler,
K. R. (1975). The fall of man. Psychoanal. Study Child, 30:589-646. Foucault,
M. (1976). The History of Sexuality, Vol. 1. London 1979: Allen
Lane. Freud,
S. (1895a). Draft G. Melancholia. S.E., 1. –––––
(1895b). Project for a scientific psychology. S.E., 1. –––––
(1896). Further remarks on the neuro-psychoses of defence. S.E.,
3. –––––
(1909). Notes upon a case of obsessional neurosis. S.E., 10. –––––
(1913). Totem and taboo. S.E., 13. –––––
(1917a). Mourning and melancholia. S.E., 14. –––––
(1917b). A difficulty in the path of psycho-analysis. S.E., 17. –––––
(1918). The taboo of virginity. S.E., 11. –––––
(1920). Beyond the pleasure principle. S.E., 18. –––––
(1921). Group psychology and the analysis of the ego. S.E., 18. –––––
(1923). The ego and the id. S.E., 19. –––––
(1927). The future of an illusion. S.E., 21. –––––
(1930). Civilization and its discontents. S.E., 21. –––––
(1933a). New introductory lectures on psycho-analysis. S.E., 22. –––––
(1933b). Why war? S.E., 22. Green,
A. (1981). Projection. In On Private Madness. Madison, CT, 1986:
Int. Univ. Press, pp. 84-103. Haynal,
A. (1985). Depression and Creativity. New York: Int. Univ. Press. Kaës,
R., Faimberg, H., Enriquez, M. & Baranes, J-J. (1993). Transmission
de la vie psychique entre générations. Paris: Dunod. Kristeva,
J. (1987). Black Sun: Depression and Melancholia. New York 1989:
Columbia Univ. Press. McLuhan,
M. H. (1964). Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man. New York:
McGraw-Hill. Shengold,
L. (1991). ”Father, Don’t You See I’m Burning?” Reflections on Sex,
Narcissism, Symbolism, and Murder: From Everything to Nothing. New
Haven & London: Yale Univ. Press. Spielrein,
S. (1912). Destruction as cause of becoming. Psychoanal. Contemp. Thought,
1995, 18:85-118. Steiner,
G. (1967). Night words. In Language and Silence: Essays 1958-66.
London: Faber & Faber, 189-199. Székely,
L. (1976). Denkverlauf, Einsamkeit und Angst: Experimentelle und Psychoanalytische
Untersuchungen über das kreative Denken. Bern: Huber. –––––
(1983). The creative process: relation to mourning and understanding.
Int. J. Psycho-Anal., 64:149-58. Werbart,
A. & Lindbom-Jakobson, M. (1993). ”The ‘living dead’: survivors of
torture and psychosis.” Psychoanal. Psychotherapy, 7:163-179. Wurmser,
L. (1987). Flucht vor dem Gewissen. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.
FOOTNOTE: This
essay was written for the Governmental Council Concerning Violence in
Moving Images, Department of Culture, Sweden, and was published in Swedish.
The English translation by Sheila Smith was made possible by the Psychosocial
Research Centre, Stockholm County Council.
Copyright:
Free Associations
Andrzej Werbart is an associate member of the Swedish Psychoanalytical
Society, private practicing psychoanalyst, and director of the Research
Unit at the Institute of Psychotherapy in Stockholm.
|
| Back |
| 1 |