Myth and Madness

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A01=Mortimer Ostow
A01=Raphael Israeli
Actual Pogroms
Adult Attention Deficit Disorder
analyst
antisemitic
Antisemitic Myths
Antisemitic Persecution
Antisemitic Sentiment
Apocalyptic Frame
Attention Deficit Disorder
Author_Mortimer Ostow
Author_Raphael Israeli
Blood Libel
Brooklyn Children's Museum
Brooklyn Children’s Museum
Category=JMAF
Category=JMH
Category=QRAM9
clinical case studies
Cosmic Enemy
cultural myth studies
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family
Family Romance Fantasy
fantasy
Fecal Odors
Fraternal Group
Group Antisemitism
group dynamics
historical bigotry analysis
jewish
Jewish Analyst
Lubavitch Hasidim
Major Forest Fire
Manic Depressive Disease
Merkavah Mysticism
Messianic Age
Mishneh Torah
Muslim Antisemitism
myths
non-Jewish Analysts
prejudice psychology
psychiatric perspectives on antisemitism
psychoanalytic theory
rivalry
romance
Sanhedrin 99a
sentiments
sibling
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138512443
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The persistence of anti-Semitism and its current resurgence after a brief post-Holocaust suppression, challenge those who study human behavior to locate the causal bases of anti-Semitism and find approaches to combat it. This is an astonishing report of a nine-year study of the psychodynamics of anti-Semitism. Undertaken by Dr. Mortimer Ostow on behalf of the Psychoanalytic Research and Development Fund, it puts flesh and bones on the discussion of antisemitism in Sigmund Freud's 1939 classic theoretical study Moses and Monotheism. Its close adherence to case material, and application of psychoanalytic theory to historical data and cultural products, yields new insights into bigotry and equity alike.

By examining prejudiced patients and their myths, Dr. Ostow shows the common threads of anti-Semitism in a variety of national and cultural settings, even under supposed optimal conditions when antisemitism is stringently controlled. The work uses the psychiatric approach, and can be read as a study of how this area of behavioral science reveals the interplay of the individual and the group, cultural background and material opportunities.

The book is divided into five major segments: Psychoanalytic interpretation of anti-Semitism in the past; clinical data on anti-Semitic sentiments in a variety of personal and national settings; mythological dimensions of anti-Semitism and apocalyptic doctrines; specific anti-Semitic myths including pre-Christian early and medieval Christian, "racial" and post-modern Muslim anti-Semitism. The final segment focuses on the pogrom mentality, including the Nazi phenomenon, antisemitic fundamentalism, and black anti-Semitism.

Myth and Madness is informed by an amazing breadth of learning: from biblical exegesis to modern sociology, from close attention to mundane patients to evaluating mythic claims of the loftiest, and at times most dangerous sort. This is a landmark effort one that will be the touchstone for theoretical and clinical works to come.

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