The Dictatorships of the 20th Century and their Origins in the Pre- and Perinatal Period

Author(s): Ludwig Janus.

Psychotherapeutic experience has established adults can and do re-enact unprocessed childhood experience over the course of their lives. However, on the collective-psychological level, this has been studied almost exclusively within the framework of psychohistory. It is this reflection that allows us to shed more light on a number of incomprehensible aspects of political and social life, and to even find some inspiration for how to deal with these enactments. Pre- and perinatal, infantile, and early childhood experiences occur in an existential, emotional, pre-lingual level; retentive memory archives them in exactly this way. This article addresses how the violent acts of Stalinist communism and Hitler’s Nazism were re-enactments of violence and abuse that the members of the Russian and German societies experienced around and after birth, manifesting the perpetrator cycle intergenerationally.

Citation

Ludwig Janus. The Dictatorships of the 20th Century and their Origins in the Pre- and Perinatal Period. Journal of Prenatal and Perinatal Psychology and Health, 35(2). (Copy this citation)
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