Independent scholar Falk analyzes the genesis of Islamic terror
from many standpoints, including religious, cultural, historical,
political, social, economic and, above all, psychological. Drawing
on his training as a clinical psychologist, Falk's writings
specialize in psychohistory and political psychology. Here, he
examines topics including infantile experience and adult terrorism,
the meaning of terror, terrorists and their mothers, narcissistic
rage and Islamic terror, and whether terrorists are normal people,
as some scholars claim. He also describes the infantile development
of terrorist pathology, non-psychoanalytic theories of terrorism,
globalization's effect on terrorism, and the notion of the clash of
civilizations. Other topics addressed in this reader-friendly
analysis include history's first Islamic terrorists and three
important cases--two recent, deadly terrorists and a primary figure
in our current war on terror.
Independent scholar Falk analyzes the genesis of Islamic terror
from many standpoints, including religious, cultural, historical,
political, social, economic and, above all, psychological. Drawing
on his training as a clinical psychologist, Falk's writings
specialize in psychohistory and political psychology. Here, he
examines topics including infantile experience and adult terrorism,
the meaning of terror, terrorists and their mothers, narcissistic
rage and Islamic terror, and whether terrorists are normal people,
as some scholars claim. He also describes the infantile development
of terrorist pathology, non-psychoanalytic theories of terrorism,
globalization's effect on terrorism, and the notion of the clash of
civilizations. Examining the emotional structure of traditional
Muslim families, Falk shows us the Muslim child's ambivalence
toward his or her parents, ways in which Muslims abuse women and
children, and the roots of Muslim rage, and why all of that plays
into the development of future terrorism. Other topics addressed in
this reader-friendly analysis include history's first Islamic
terrorists and three important cases--two recent, deadly terrorists
and a primary figure in our current war on terror.
The central idea throughout the book is that a person's attitude
toward terror and terrorism--as well as whether he or she becomes a
murderous terrorist, or even who wages a global war on terror--has
much to do with that person's own terrifying experiences in infancy
and childhood. Such terror, usually experienced first in the
earliest interactions with the mother, is symbolically expressed,
as Falk shows, in fairy tales and myths about terrifying witches
and female monsters. Further terror may be experienced in the
relationship with the father and also in various other traumatic
ways. It is these early terrors, when extreme and uncontrollable,
that most often produce terrorists and wars on terror, Falk argues.
Thus, his book focuses on the conscious, but also on the irrational
and unconscious causes of terrorism.
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