Wounded Monster: Hitler's Path from Trauma to MalevolenceBloomsbury Academic, 6 nov. 2002 - 368 pages Few authors who have written about Hitler have understood the deeply damaging effects of psychic trauma on his private life and the way he functioned in the public sphere. Nearly all major biographers have neglected the importance of Hitler's childhood trauma and his later combat trauma during World War I. In Wounded Monster, Theo Dorpat demonstrates how extreme emotional and physical abuse from his father, and his unusually long combat service during the Great War became the most formative influences of his life, resulting in severe psychiatric disorders. This psychiatric biography of Hitler discusses the central importance of his vulnerability to shame emotions, as well as the trauma-induced construction of an extensive repertoire of mainly unconscious mechanisms for the avoidance of feelings of shame. Dorpat provides deep insights into Hitler's shame vulnerability as a prime cause of his suicidal behavior, including his suicide threats, two failed suicide attempts, and his final completed suicide. This work will assist those attempting to explain Hitler and his actions, through an examination of the influences that shaped his psyche. |
Table des matières
Childhood and Family | 1 |
The Contribution | 33 |
Failure Hardship and Misery | 51 |
Droits d'auteur | |
10 autres sections non affichées
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Wounded Monster: Hitler's Path from Trauma to Malevolence Theo L. Dorpat Aucun aperçu disponible - 2002 |
Wounded Monster: Hitler's Path from Trauma to Malevolence Theodore L. Dorpat Aucun aperçu disponible - 2002 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
abuse Adolf Hitler aggressive Albert Speer Alois American anger antisocial behaviors army artist August Kubizek Beer Hall Putsch believe cause Chapter charisma childhood and combat chronic childhood trauma chronic combat trauma chronic PTSD chronic traumas combat exposure cryptorchism death defeat defensive denial depression described destructive diagnosis effects Eva Braun experience father fear feelings Führer myth Geli Geli Raubal Germany's Goebbels grandiose hatred Haufstaengl helplessness historian Hitler's chronic humiliation Ibid impulses individuals inner circle intense interactions Jews killed Klara Kubizek later malevolence Maser Mein Kampf mental military mother Munich Nazi Party painful paranoid Pasewalk pathological patients personality physical post-traumatic stress disorder psychiatric disorders psychic trauma psychoanalyst psychological PTSD rage Rauschning Redlich relations relationship Robert Waite sadomasochistic sadomasochistic perversions sexual shame emotions social soldiers Stierlin suffered symptoms Third Reich tion unconscious victims Vienna Vietnam veterans violence Wehrmacht women World World War II

