ABSTRACT

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 effort to collate and examine some of the material already at our disposal as an encouragement to serious thought on this question and other related questions.'If terrorism is not new, what is it about the recent attacks that gives us a sense that something has changed? Is it the scale of the destruction, or the anxiety that we are facing some altogether new uncertainty? Are we in some sense facing a new enemy? ...In reflecting on these and other related questions we may be facing a similar watershed of understanding to that faced by Freud at the end of the Great War...In the absence of progress in our thinking today, political leaders and public opinion will likely turn to previous political and religious ideas, investing in them with a fundamentalist certainty that spells disaster.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part |107 pages

Terrorism

part |58 pages

Hatred, Enmity and Revenge

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter Nine|7 pages

The role of hatred in the ego

chapter Ten|15 pages

Fundamentalism and idolatry

chapter Eleven|8 pages

The benign and malignant other

part |102 pages

Why War?

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter Fifteen|10 pages

Psychoanalysis and war

chapter Seventeen|22 pages

Silence is the real crime 1

part |107 pages

The Aftermath of War