2005
DOI: 10.1516/yddf-fq2p-n53x-ml1q
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Metaphor and the violent act

Abstract: During the treatment of violent individuals who were, incidentally, highly verbal, the authors noticed that physical assaults were often preceded by the perpetrator' s use of metaphors. It was observed that the linguistic metaphors failed to function as ordinary 'as if' devices and became 'concretised'. When this occurred, the perpetrators resorted to a physical attack. In this paper, the authors argue that the capacity to interconnect (which is considered to be the essence of psychic work) is dependent upon w… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Here we see evidence of a concretized/foreclosed metaphor in which the identity of analogous experiences (surgery and psychoanalytic therapy) eclipses the difference, resulting in a past reality being presented rather than represented symbolically (Campbell and Enckell 2005;Karlsson 2002). Whereas generative metaphors provide a containing function, "concretised metaphors are perceived as presentations stating a merciless reality; instead of being functioning symbols, concretised metaphors are experienced as immovable facts with which one cannot negotiate" (Campbell and Enckell 2005, p. 802).…”
Section: G E N E R At I V E V S C O N C R E T I Z E D / F O R E C Lmentioning
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Here we see evidence of a concretized/foreclosed metaphor in which the identity of analogous experiences (surgery and psychoanalytic therapy) eclipses the difference, resulting in a past reality being presented rather than represented symbolically (Campbell and Enckell 2005;Karlsson 2002). Whereas generative metaphors provide a containing function, "concretised metaphors are perceived as presentations stating a merciless reality; instead of being functioning symbols, concretised metaphors are experienced as immovable facts with which one cannot negotiate" (Campbell and Enckell 2005, p. 802).…”
Section: G E N E R At I V E V S C O N C R E T I Z E D / F O R E C Lmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…ascribed metaphorical significance by our patients (Arlow 1979;Borbely 1998;Campbell and Enckell 2005;Enckell 1999;Ogden 1997;Rizzuto 2001). Transference and metaphor, notes Arlow (1979), mean the same thing, namely, the transfer or carrying over of meaning from one context to another.…”
mentioning
confidence: 83%
“…is best rephrased, as it is usually met with derision and is based on the, often false, assumption that the mother has words for her feelings. A difficulty for offenders is the absence of emotional, descriptive language, which leads to actions instead of thoughts (Campbell, 2005).…”
Section: Coping With Challenging Emotionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As is well known, ‘symbol’ has been a cherished concept in psychoanalysis ever since Freud. ‘Metaphor’ has gained a foothold in our field during only the last two or three decades (see Arlow, 1979; Borberly, 1998; Campbell and Enckell, 2005; Melnick, 1997, Ogden, 1997; Rizzuto, 2001). This paper is a comparison of ‘symbol’ and ‘metaphor’.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%