The Troubled Mind of Northern Ireland: An Analysis of the Emotional Effects of the Troubles

Author(s) : Raman Kapur, Author(s) : Jim Campbell

The Troubled Mind of Northern Ireland: An Analysis of the Emotional Effects of the Troubles

Book Details

  • Publisher : Routledge
  • Published : 2004
  • Cover : Paperback
  • Pages : 160
  • Category :
    Psychoanalysis
  • Catalogue No : 17713
  • ISBN 13 : 9781855759930
  • ISBN 10 : 1855759934

Customer Reviews

Our customers have given this title an average rating of 5 out of 5 from 1 review(s), add your own review for this title.

Dr C.J.S.Holland on 30/09/2004

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Brief review of The Troubled Mind of Northern Ireland by Raman Kapur and Jim Campbell.

"WHO WANTS TO UNDERSTAND, I WANT TO FIGHT"

This is a first class undertaking to try to say it straight to the Troubled Mind of Northern Ireland, and to add deep psychological understanding from the world of psychoanalysis. The book clearly addresses the powerful grip of the fundamentalist, primitive and fascist state of mind, in its individual and group manifestations, and offers both simple and profound analytical concepts for elucidating such primitive, persistent and pervasive states of mind. There will be opposition in proportion to the degree that various people and groups feel that their treasured beliefs are being described in ways that they do not like. The fundamentalists in all religions, sects and movements
Create their corresponding opposite pole - like conservative evangelical capitalists in the USA or "the West", and Al Quaida or Bin Ladin in "the East".
The journalist between such polarised opponents is likely to be twice traumatised - once "standing over a body describing the site for the photographer and going on to the next one", and then, when attempting to balance the arguments, is attacked from both sides as dreadfully biased.
Hearing so often about the terrible traumas from all ranges of society, and trying to contain the feelings engendered by the primitive actions and counteractions, secondary trauma is the hazard of the therapists, the therapeutic community and the peacemakers. As Kapur and Campbell describe so vividly, the offered insight is treated as an invasive attack. They know, as one of the founders of psychoanalysis warned many decades ago, that as the thoughts that are personally unacceptable to us are suppressed into the unconscious of individuals and groups, so we should not be surprised at the resistance to pointers towards unpalatable truths, and not only resistance to, but hatred of those who wish to build bridges of understanding or hope.
The authors have described in detail many vivid examples from a variety of settings illustrating the troubled minds and the ways that analytical ideas, concepts and theories can illuminate such troubles - or even understand them. What Kapur and Campbell are courageously taking on is the common atmosphere of "who wants to understand, Id rather fight!"

Dr C.J.S.Holland
Psychiatrist, Psychoanalyst and Psychotherapist
Visiting Consultant to Threshold for over ten years.
Scottish Institute of Human Relations, Edinburgh.

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