ABSTRACT
Why, when and how does aggression go wrong?
How can we make sense of apparently meaningless destructiveness and violence
Aggression is a part of human nature that energises our relationships, acts as an impetus for psychic development, and enables us to master our world. More often, we focus on its more destructive aspects, such as the violence individuals inflict on themselves or others and overlook the positive functions of aggression.
In Aggression and Destructiveness Celia Harding brings together contributions from experienced psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists to explore the roots of aggression and the clinical dilemmas it presents in psychotherapy. Beginning with accounts of aggression and destructiveness from a range of developmental and theoretical perspectives, the book provides useful insights into subjects including:
- Bullying and abusive relationships
- Male and female violence and destructiveness
- Depressive, perverse and psychotic states of mind
- Attacks on therapeutic treatment
This book makes a valuable contribution to the attempt to make sense of human aggression, destructiveness and violence perpetrated against the self, others and reality. It will be of great interest to trainee and qualified psychodynamic counsellors, psychoanalytic psychotherapists and psychoanalysts.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|37 pages
Mapping the terrain
part II|77 pages
Developmental and theoretical perspectives
chapter Chapter 3|18 pages
From biting teeth to biting wit: the normative development of aggression 1
chapter Chapter 4|20 pages
Attachment, trauma and violence: understanding destructiveness from an attachment theory perspective
chapter Chapter 5|19 pages
‘In pieces': the effects of the memory of a violent father on a son’s development
chapter Chapter 6|18 pages
The problem of certain psychic realities: aggression and violence as perverse solutions 1
part III|120 pages
Destructiveness in disguise and as disguise