ABSTRACT

The main theme of this book concerns the continuing psychic centrality of parents for their children. Several chapters examine an author and his works, outlining that author's relationships with parents, good-and-bad, and making descriptive comments about these based both on information gleaned from the author's life and writings as well as from observations found in autobiographies, biographies and critical works. Since these studies in part concern stories of child abuse and deprivation, the book predominantly illustrates bad parenting that seems to have contributed to the child's psychopathology. Yet in most cases there has also been an evocation by the trauma and deprivation of adaptive and even creative reactions--this positive effect also of course largely attributable to concomitant good parenting--and yet there are some cases where little of this seems to have existed and yet the children still turn out to be able to make something of themselves. The conditions that make for psychic health in a traumatized childhood are mysterious and can't always be accounted for.

part |273 pages

Part One

chapter One|33 pages

Kaspar Hauser and soul murder

chapter Two|6 pages

A note on soul murder

chapter Three|27 pages

Dickens, Little Dorrit, and soul murder

chapter Four|25 pages

Haunted by parents: Samuel Butler

chapter Five|22 pages

Swinburne—a child who wanted to be beaten

part |131 pages

Part Two