Abstract
The ability to hate is a skill indicative of ego development to the level of object constancy. People can be divided into three categories: those who cannot hate, those who hate but can not stop hating, and those who can both hate and get over hating. Among those who cannot stop hating are two sub-groups: those who live with their hatred by relying upon scapegoats, and those who repress their knowledge of their hatred. The latter subgroup includes a number of psychoanalytic patients whose repressed hatred presents a specific obstacle to transference due to the persistence of a blocking introject. Recovery from the complications of repressed hatred requires the analyst to participate in the comforting process that strengthens the patient through the retrieval of aggression lost to repression.
TY - JOUR
T1 - The longest pleasure: a psychoanalytic study of hatred.
A1 - Galdston,R,
PY - 1987/1/1/pubmed
PY - 1987/1/1/medline
PY - 1987/1/1/entrez
SP - 371
EP - 8
JF - The International journal of psycho-analysis
JO - Int J Psychoanal
VL - 68 (Pt 3)
N2 - The ability to hate is a skill indicative of ego development to the level of object constancy. People can be divided into three categories: those who cannot hate, those who hate but can not stop hating, and those who can both hate and get over hating. Among those who cannot stop hating are two sub-groups: those who live with their hatred by relying upon scapegoats, and those who repress their knowledge of their hatred. The latter subgroup includes a number of psychoanalytic patients whose repressed hatred presents a specific obstacle to transference due to the persistence of a blocking introject. Recovery from the complications of repressed hatred requires the analyst to participate in the comforting process that strengthens the patient through the retrieval of aggression lost to repression.
SN - 0020-7578
UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/3667085/The_longest_pleasure:_a_psychoanalytic_study_of_hatred_
DB - PRIME
DP - Unbound Medicine
ER -