Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

The Unwelcome Child as a Dynamic Construct of the Terrorist Mind

The Unwelcome Child as a Dynamic Construct of the Terrorist Mind Psychoanalytic discourse on the dynamics of the terrorist mindset has been challenged by the absence of clinical work with terrorists in the literature. This paper proposes Ferenczi’s concept of the unwelcome child as a dynamic construct of the terrorist mind. Unwelcome children have weak life instincts and correspondingly high death instincts. Clinical material from the analysis of an unwelcome child is presented which suggests that a sense of anomie and alienation from social ties may lead to a fundamentalist mind set which may potentially lead to a search for meaning in terrorist acts. The struggle between life and death instincts is demonstrated in the clinical material, with life instinct tipping the scales in this instance. Self-preservative survival instinct is proposed as the theoretical construct for life instinct in contrast to Freud’s libido theory. The unwelcome child represents an object relations theory of the death instinct. Unwelcome children are likely a widespread phenomenon with significant social consequences. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The American Journal of Psychoanalysis Springer Journals

The Unwelcome Child as a Dynamic Construct of the Terrorist Mind

The American Journal of Psychoanalysis , Volume 82 (2) – Jun 1, 2022

Loading next page...
 
/lp/springer-journals/the-unwelcome-child-as-a-dynamic-construct-of-the-terrorist-mind-WxgMWP8ixU

References (48)

Publisher
Springer Journals
Copyright
Copyright © Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis 2022
ISSN
0002-9548
eISSN
1573-6741
DOI
10.1057/s11231-022-09356-9
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Psychoanalytic discourse on the dynamics of the terrorist mindset has been challenged by the absence of clinical work with terrorists in the literature. This paper proposes Ferenczi’s concept of the unwelcome child as a dynamic construct of the terrorist mind. Unwelcome children have weak life instincts and correspondingly high death instincts. Clinical material from the analysis of an unwelcome child is presented which suggests that a sense of anomie and alienation from social ties may lead to a fundamentalist mind set which may potentially lead to a search for meaning in terrorist acts. The struggle between life and death instincts is demonstrated in the clinical material, with life instinct tipping the scales in this instance. Self-preservative survival instinct is proposed as the theoretical construct for life instinct in contrast to Freud’s libido theory. The unwelcome child represents an object relations theory of the death instinct. Unwelcome children are likely a widespread phenomenon with significant social consequences.

Journal

The American Journal of PsychoanalysisSpringer Journals

Published: Jun 1, 2022

Keywords: the fundamentalist mind; the unwelcome child; self-preservative instinct; deadness and aliveness in the counter-transference

There are no references for this article.