Violent States and Creative States (2 Volume Set)
From the Global to the Individual
Herausgeber: Adlam, John; Lee, Bandy; Kluttig, Tilman
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Violent States and Creative States (2 Volume Set)
From the Global to the Individual
Herausgeber: Adlam, John; Lee, Bandy; Kluttig, Tilman
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In considering the different states in which individual acts of human violence take place, this thorough analysis reveals the opposing state of violence to be creativity. With contributions across a range of disciplines, this is the first integrated approach to move beyond merely mitigating violence to fostering creativity as a means of prevention.
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In considering the different states in which individual acts of human violence take place, this thorough analysis reveals the opposing state of violence to be creativity. With contributions across a range of disciplines, this is the first integrated approach to move beyond merely mitigating violence to fostering creativity as a means of prevention.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 2
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Mai 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 252mm x 186mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 964g
- ISBN-13: 9781785920479
- ISBN-10: 1785920472
- Artikelnr.: 50857324
- Verlag: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 2
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Mai 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 252mm x 186mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 964g
- ISBN-13: 9781785920479
- ISBN-10: 1785920472
- Artikelnr.: 50857324
Edited by John Adlam, Tilman Kluttig and Bandy X. Lee. Prologue by Estela Welldon. Epilogue by James Gilligan.
Acknowledgements. Prologue, Estela Welldon. Introduction, John Adlam,
Tilman Kluttig and Bandy X. Lee. Part I: Introductorily and Theoretically.
1. From Human Violence to Creativity: The Structural Nature of Violence and
the Spiritual Nature of Its Remedy, John L. Young, Bandy X. Lee and Grace
Lee. 2. Injury and Insult: Reciprocal Violence and Reflexive Violence, John
Adlam and Christopher Scanlon. 3. The Story of Mr A: The Interplay between
Individual Trauma and Global Politics, Tilman Kluttig. Part II: Violent
States and State Violence. 4. Baltimore Past and Present: The Violent State
of Racial Segregation, Annie Stopford with Gardnel Carter. 5. Psychosocial
Implications of Political Trauma and Social Recognition I: A Lacanian
Approach to State Violence in South America, Gina Donoso. 6. Psychosocial
Implications of Political Trauma and Social Recognition II: Experiences
from the Truth Commission of Ecuador, Gina Donoso. 7. State Violence and
State Creativity: Caring for Women and Girls Who Were Raped during the 1994
Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, Bandy X. Lee, Glorieuse Uwizeye and
Thilo Kroll. 8. Perpetrators of Socially Accepted Violence: States of Mind
beyond Pathology and Deviancy, Efrat Even-Tzur. Part III: Terror in the
Public Sphere. 9. Terror, Violence and the Public Sphere, David W. Jones.
10. '1 in 5 Brit Muslims' Sympathy for Jihadis': What It Means to Be a
Muslim Living in Britain Today, Ismail Karolia and Julian Manley. 11.
Flight 9525: Andreas Lubitz and the Psychology of the Lone Terrorist, Klaus
Hoffmann. 12. Terror in the Mind of the Terrorist, Barry Richards.Part IV:
Creative Structures: From the Local to the Global. 13. The City Project,
Aileen Schloerb. 14. Social Dreaming and Creativity in South Africa:
Imag(in)ing the 'Unthought Known', Hayley Berman and Julian Manley. 15. The
International Criminal Court and Global Justice, Matt Killingsworth. 16.
Finding Stories in a Form that can Be Acted: Creative States in Response to
Climate Change Denial and Biosphere Destruction, Lucy Neal.
Part I: Introductorily and Theoretically. 1. The Microcosm of Aggression:
Early Parent-Child Interaction and the Struggle for Separation, Reinmar Du
Bois. 2. Bad to the Bone or Breaking Bad?: A Developmental View of Violent
States of Mind, Maggie McAlister. 3. The Pathological Third, Violence and
Reality: Psychological Pathways to Violence in Psychosis and Narcissism,
Clinton Van Der Walt. Part II: Violent States of Mind. 4. Is There a
Murderer Here? : The Language of Agency and Violence in Homicide
Perpetrators, Gwen Adshead, Zoe Berko, Sarita Bose, Martha Ferrito and
Martina Mindang. 5. Forever Hungry for Her Eyes: The Pain of Maternal
Absence, Anna Motz. 6. Violent States in Feeding Distress: The Antigone
Paradigm and the Creative Possibilities of Collective Re-Imagining, John
Adlam. 7. Anorexia Mirabilis: Voluntary Self Starvation and the Role of
Spirituality as a Legitimate Response to Sexual Violence, Robyn Timoclea.
8. Violence, Rage and Creativity, Deborah J. Cohan. Part III: Terror in the
Private Sphere. 9. Breaking into a Sacred, Bloodier Speech: The Healing
Role of Monsters in Child Development, Trauma Play, and the Cultural
Imagination, Claude Barbre and Jill Barbre. 10. 'You be the murderer now',
Tamsin Cottis. 11. Into the Labyrinth: Working with Bizarre, Unspeakable
and Extreme Violence, Sarita Bose, Martha Ferrito, Alex Maguire, Martina
Mindang and Andrew Ware. 12. Treat Me Nice: Music Therapy and Extreme
Violence, Alex Maguire. Part IV: Creative Approaches - From the Global to
the Individual. 13. Restorative Justice Applications in Mental Health
Settings: Pathways to Recovery and Restitution, Gerard Drennan. 14. Violent
Acts and Creative Responses: Resilience Building Through Art Psychotherapy,
Kate Rothwell and Simon Hackett. 15. Spiritual Movements as Creative Forms
of Response to Structural Violence, James S. Vrettos. 16. Violent states
and existential-therapeutic work in Mexican ex voto painting, Wayne Martin.
Epilogue, James Gilligan.
Tilman Kluttig and Bandy X. Lee. Part I: Introductorily and Theoretically.
1. From Human Violence to Creativity: The Structural Nature of Violence and
the Spiritual Nature of Its Remedy, John L. Young, Bandy X. Lee and Grace
Lee. 2. Injury and Insult: Reciprocal Violence and Reflexive Violence, John
Adlam and Christopher Scanlon. 3. The Story of Mr A: The Interplay between
Individual Trauma and Global Politics, Tilman Kluttig. Part II: Violent
States and State Violence. 4. Baltimore Past and Present: The Violent State
of Racial Segregation, Annie Stopford with Gardnel Carter. 5. Psychosocial
Implications of Political Trauma and Social Recognition I: A Lacanian
Approach to State Violence in South America, Gina Donoso. 6. Psychosocial
Implications of Political Trauma and Social Recognition II: Experiences
from the Truth Commission of Ecuador, Gina Donoso. 7. State Violence and
State Creativity: Caring for Women and Girls Who Were Raped during the 1994
Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, Bandy X. Lee, Glorieuse Uwizeye and
Thilo Kroll. 8. Perpetrators of Socially Accepted Violence: States of Mind
beyond Pathology and Deviancy, Efrat Even-Tzur. Part III: Terror in the
Public Sphere. 9. Terror, Violence and the Public Sphere, David W. Jones.
10. '1 in 5 Brit Muslims' Sympathy for Jihadis': What It Means to Be a
Muslim Living in Britain Today, Ismail Karolia and Julian Manley. 11.
Flight 9525: Andreas Lubitz and the Psychology of the Lone Terrorist, Klaus
Hoffmann. 12. Terror in the Mind of the Terrorist, Barry Richards.Part IV:
Creative Structures: From the Local to the Global. 13. The City Project,
Aileen Schloerb. 14. Social Dreaming and Creativity in South Africa:
Imag(in)ing the 'Unthought Known', Hayley Berman and Julian Manley. 15. The
International Criminal Court and Global Justice, Matt Killingsworth. 16.
Finding Stories in a Form that can Be Acted: Creative States in Response to
Climate Change Denial and Biosphere Destruction, Lucy Neal.
Part I: Introductorily and Theoretically. 1. The Microcosm of Aggression:
Early Parent-Child Interaction and the Struggle for Separation, Reinmar Du
Bois. 2. Bad to the Bone or Breaking Bad?: A Developmental View of Violent
States of Mind, Maggie McAlister. 3. The Pathological Third, Violence and
Reality: Psychological Pathways to Violence in Psychosis and Narcissism,
Clinton Van Der Walt. Part II: Violent States of Mind. 4. Is There a
Murderer Here? : The Language of Agency and Violence in Homicide
Perpetrators, Gwen Adshead, Zoe Berko, Sarita Bose, Martha Ferrito and
Martina Mindang. 5. Forever Hungry for Her Eyes: The Pain of Maternal
Absence, Anna Motz. 6. Violent States in Feeding Distress: The Antigone
Paradigm and the Creative Possibilities of Collective Re-Imagining, John
Adlam. 7. Anorexia Mirabilis: Voluntary Self Starvation and the Role of
Spirituality as a Legitimate Response to Sexual Violence, Robyn Timoclea.
8. Violence, Rage and Creativity, Deborah J. Cohan. Part III: Terror in the
Private Sphere. 9. Breaking into a Sacred, Bloodier Speech: The Healing
Role of Monsters in Child Development, Trauma Play, and the Cultural
Imagination, Claude Barbre and Jill Barbre. 10. 'You be the murderer now',
Tamsin Cottis. 11. Into the Labyrinth: Working with Bizarre, Unspeakable
and Extreme Violence, Sarita Bose, Martha Ferrito, Alex Maguire, Martina
Mindang and Andrew Ware. 12. Treat Me Nice: Music Therapy and Extreme
Violence, Alex Maguire. Part IV: Creative Approaches - From the Global to
the Individual. 13. Restorative Justice Applications in Mental Health
Settings: Pathways to Recovery and Restitution, Gerard Drennan. 14. Violent
Acts and Creative Responses: Resilience Building Through Art Psychotherapy,
Kate Rothwell and Simon Hackett. 15. Spiritual Movements as Creative Forms
of Response to Structural Violence, James S. Vrettos. 16. Violent states
and existential-therapeutic work in Mexican ex voto painting, Wayne Martin.
Epilogue, James Gilligan.
Acknowledgements. Prologue, Estela Welldon. Introduction, John Adlam,
Tilman Kluttig and Bandy X. Lee. Part I: Introductorily and Theoretically.
1. From Human Violence to Creativity: The Structural Nature of Violence and
the Spiritual Nature of Its Remedy, John L. Young, Bandy X. Lee and Grace
Lee. 2. Injury and Insult: Reciprocal Violence and Reflexive Violence, John
Adlam and Christopher Scanlon. 3. The Story of Mr A: The Interplay between
Individual Trauma and Global Politics, Tilman Kluttig. Part II: Violent
States and State Violence. 4. Baltimore Past and Present: The Violent State
of Racial Segregation, Annie Stopford with Gardnel Carter. 5. Psychosocial
Implications of Political Trauma and Social Recognition I: A Lacanian
Approach to State Violence in South America, Gina Donoso. 6. Psychosocial
Implications of Political Trauma and Social Recognition II: Experiences
from the Truth Commission of Ecuador, Gina Donoso. 7. State Violence and
State Creativity: Caring for Women and Girls Who Were Raped during the 1994
Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, Bandy X. Lee, Glorieuse Uwizeye and
Thilo Kroll. 8. Perpetrators of Socially Accepted Violence: States of Mind
beyond Pathology and Deviancy, Efrat Even-Tzur. Part III: Terror in the
Public Sphere. 9. Terror, Violence and the Public Sphere, David W. Jones.
10. '1 in 5 Brit Muslims' Sympathy for Jihadis': What It Means to Be a
Muslim Living in Britain Today, Ismail Karolia and Julian Manley. 11.
Flight 9525: Andreas Lubitz and the Psychology of the Lone Terrorist, Klaus
Hoffmann. 12. Terror in the Mind of the Terrorist, Barry Richards.Part IV:
Creative Structures: From the Local to the Global. 13. The City Project,
Aileen Schloerb. 14. Social Dreaming and Creativity in South Africa:
Imag(in)ing the 'Unthought Known', Hayley Berman and Julian Manley. 15. The
International Criminal Court and Global Justice, Matt Killingsworth. 16.
Finding Stories in a Form that can Be Acted: Creative States in Response to
Climate Change Denial and Biosphere Destruction, Lucy Neal.
Part I: Introductorily and Theoretically. 1. The Microcosm of Aggression:
Early Parent-Child Interaction and the Struggle for Separation, Reinmar Du
Bois. 2. Bad to the Bone or Breaking Bad?: A Developmental View of Violent
States of Mind, Maggie McAlister. 3. The Pathological Third, Violence and
Reality: Psychological Pathways to Violence in Psychosis and Narcissism,
Clinton Van Der Walt. Part II: Violent States of Mind. 4. Is There a
Murderer Here? : The Language of Agency and Violence in Homicide
Perpetrators, Gwen Adshead, Zoe Berko, Sarita Bose, Martha Ferrito and
Martina Mindang. 5. Forever Hungry for Her Eyes: The Pain of Maternal
Absence, Anna Motz. 6. Violent States in Feeding Distress: The Antigone
Paradigm and the Creative Possibilities of Collective Re-Imagining, John
Adlam. 7. Anorexia Mirabilis: Voluntary Self Starvation and the Role of
Spirituality as a Legitimate Response to Sexual Violence, Robyn Timoclea.
8. Violence, Rage and Creativity, Deborah J. Cohan. Part III: Terror in the
Private Sphere. 9. Breaking into a Sacred, Bloodier Speech: The Healing
Role of Monsters in Child Development, Trauma Play, and the Cultural
Imagination, Claude Barbre and Jill Barbre. 10. 'You be the murderer now',
Tamsin Cottis. 11. Into the Labyrinth: Working with Bizarre, Unspeakable
and Extreme Violence, Sarita Bose, Martha Ferrito, Alex Maguire, Martina
Mindang and Andrew Ware. 12. Treat Me Nice: Music Therapy and Extreme
Violence, Alex Maguire. Part IV: Creative Approaches - From the Global to
the Individual. 13. Restorative Justice Applications in Mental Health
Settings: Pathways to Recovery and Restitution, Gerard Drennan. 14. Violent
Acts and Creative Responses: Resilience Building Through Art Psychotherapy,
Kate Rothwell and Simon Hackett. 15. Spiritual Movements as Creative Forms
of Response to Structural Violence, James S. Vrettos. 16. Violent states
and existential-therapeutic work in Mexican ex voto painting, Wayne Martin.
Epilogue, James Gilligan.
Tilman Kluttig and Bandy X. Lee. Part I: Introductorily and Theoretically.
1. From Human Violence to Creativity: The Structural Nature of Violence and
the Spiritual Nature of Its Remedy, John L. Young, Bandy X. Lee and Grace
Lee. 2. Injury and Insult: Reciprocal Violence and Reflexive Violence, John
Adlam and Christopher Scanlon. 3. The Story of Mr A: The Interplay between
Individual Trauma and Global Politics, Tilman Kluttig. Part II: Violent
States and State Violence. 4. Baltimore Past and Present: The Violent State
of Racial Segregation, Annie Stopford with Gardnel Carter. 5. Psychosocial
Implications of Political Trauma and Social Recognition I: A Lacanian
Approach to State Violence in South America, Gina Donoso. 6. Psychosocial
Implications of Political Trauma and Social Recognition II: Experiences
from the Truth Commission of Ecuador, Gina Donoso. 7. State Violence and
State Creativity: Caring for Women and Girls Who Were Raped during the 1994
Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, Bandy X. Lee, Glorieuse Uwizeye and
Thilo Kroll. 8. Perpetrators of Socially Accepted Violence: States of Mind
beyond Pathology and Deviancy, Efrat Even-Tzur. Part III: Terror in the
Public Sphere. 9. Terror, Violence and the Public Sphere, David W. Jones.
10. '1 in 5 Brit Muslims' Sympathy for Jihadis': What It Means to Be a
Muslim Living in Britain Today, Ismail Karolia and Julian Manley. 11.
Flight 9525: Andreas Lubitz and the Psychology of the Lone Terrorist, Klaus
Hoffmann. 12. Terror in the Mind of the Terrorist, Barry Richards.Part IV:
Creative Structures: From the Local to the Global. 13. The City Project,
Aileen Schloerb. 14. Social Dreaming and Creativity in South Africa:
Imag(in)ing the 'Unthought Known', Hayley Berman and Julian Manley. 15. The
International Criminal Court and Global Justice, Matt Killingsworth. 16.
Finding Stories in a Form that can Be Acted: Creative States in Response to
Climate Change Denial and Biosphere Destruction, Lucy Neal.
Part I: Introductorily and Theoretically. 1. The Microcosm of Aggression:
Early Parent-Child Interaction and the Struggle for Separation, Reinmar Du
Bois. 2. Bad to the Bone or Breaking Bad?: A Developmental View of Violent
States of Mind, Maggie McAlister. 3. The Pathological Third, Violence and
Reality: Psychological Pathways to Violence in Psychosis and Narcissism,
Clinton Van Der Walt. Part II: Violent States of Mind. 4. Is There a
Murderer Here? : The Language of Agency and Violence in Homicide
Perpetrators, Gwen Adshead, Zoe Berko, Sarita Bose, Martha Ferrito and
Martina Mindang. 5. Forever Hungry for Her Eyes: The Pain of Maternal
Absence, Anna Motz. 6. Violent States in Feeding Distress: The Antigone
Paradigm and the Creative Possibilities of Collective Re-Imagining, John
Adlam. 7. Anorexia Mirabilis: Voluntary Self Starvation and the Role of
Spirituality as a Legitimate Response to Sexual Violence, Robyn Timoclea.
8. Violence, Rage and Creativity, Deborah J. Cohan. Part III: Terror in the
Private Sphere. 9. Breaking into a Sacred, Bloodier Speech: The Healing
Role of Monsters in Child Development, Trauma Play, and the Cultural
Imagination, Claude Barbre and Jill Barbre. 10. 'You be the murderer now',
Tamsin Cottis. 11. Into the Labyrinth: Working with Bizarre, Unspeakable
and Extreme Violence, Sarita Bose, Martha Ferrito, Alex Maguire, Martina
Mindang and Andrew Ware. 12. Treat Me Nice: Music Therapy and Extreme
Violence, Alex Maguire. Part IV: Creative Approaches - From the Global to
the Individual. 13. Restorative Justice Applications in Mental Health
Settings: Pathways to Recovery and Restitution, Gerard Drennan. 14. Violent
Acts and Creative Responses: Resilience Building Through Art Psychotherapy,
Kate Rothwell and Simon Hackett. 15. Spiritual Movements as Creative Forms
of Response to Structural Violence, James S. Vrettos. 16. Violent states
and existential-therapeutic work in Mexican ex voto painting, Wayne Martin.
Epilogue, James Gilligan.