ABSTRACT

The book predominantly explores the psychic histories of patients who display their transgenerational conflicts/trauma through forensic acts. It establishes the need to consider the details of patient history in understanding the patient within both the therapeutic encounter and the treatment team milieu. There are many themes of contemporary interest including gang murders, sibling jealousy, fatal eating disorder, personality disorder, and the effects of exclusion and marginalization within group and community dynamics and the global prevalence of mass murder. The author describes the collapse into dyadic thinking and enactment that prevails when the third perspective, classically represented by the father within the Oedipal dynamic, is excluded or absent. Providing detailed case studies he shows how seemingly meaningless explosions of violence or perversion are attempts to master early experiences of trauma and/or exclusion, often passed down unconsciously through the generations. Using the theories of Matte Blanco and notions of the 'critical date' the chapters give unique insight into the timing and triggers of crimes, however apparently random.

chapter TWO|13 pages

Perverse triangulation*

ByPeter Aylward, Gerald Wooster

chapter THREE|14 pages

Murder: persecuted by jealousy*

ByPeter Aylward, Gerald Wooster

chapter FOUR|11 pages

Crossing the divide*

ByPeter Aylward, Gerald Wooster

chapter FIVE|16 pages

The revenge involved in diagnosing untreatability *

ByPeter Aylward, Gerald Wooster

chapter SIX|19 pages

Boy do I exist! The avoidance of annihilatory terror through paedophilic acts

ByPeter Aylward, Gerald Wooster

chapter SEVEN|25 pages

Digesting history as a lifesaver*

ByPeter Aylward, Gerald Wooster

chapter EIGHT|26 pages

In defence of the realm ... of emotion*

ByPeter Aylward, Gerald Wooster

chapter NINE|45 pages

Understanding the Dunblane Massacre*

ByPeter Aylward, Gerald Wooster

chapter |9 pages

Postscript

ByAnders Breivik