They were children when the came into the trenches and became the wounded, watching their comrades die in agony and filth. When they left the trenches and came to Dr. Freud they were decidedly no longer children. They no longer fit neatly into his pleasure principal, engendering his controversial ideas about the death instinct. Van Haute, philosophical anthropology, U. of Nijmegan) and practitioner Geyskens delve deep into the resulting tensions between such prime components of psychoanalysis as attachment and infantile trauma, analyzing the work of Melanie Klein, John Bowlby, Imre Hermann and the largely overlooked Hungarian School of Psychoanalysis. They agree with Hermann's distinction between natural development and subjective theory, coming to original and elegant solutions to what would appear to be eternally unresolved ambiguities and to a closer reading of what drove Freud to his theories after his encounters with the shattered children of entrenched warfare. Annotation ©2007 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Two leading psychoanalysts resolve the conflict between attachment theory and trauma theory.
In From Death Instinct to Attachment Theory, Tomas Geyskens and Philippe Van Haute address a theoretical conflict at the heart of contemporary psychoanalysis. Analytic theory, especially the work of Melanie Klein, asserts the developmental primacy of infantile Hilflosigkeit and the trauma it inevitably inflicts; however, John Bowlby and other attachment theorists have shown that attachment to the mother is primary and instinctive—and not the result of traumatic helplessness.
Geyskens and Van Haute resolve the apparent tension between the empirical fact of the primacy of attachment and the fundamental psychoanalytic theory of infantile trauma by drawing on Imre Hermann’s distinction between natural development and subjective history. Arguing that Hermann’s theory constitutes a workable clinical anthropology of attachment, they undertake a deep and revealing analysis of the work of Freud and Klein on the death instinct, trauma, and infantile sexuality; the critique leveled by attachment theorists like Bowlby; and the overlooked insights of the Hungarian School of Psychoanalysis.
From Death Instinct to Attachment Theory offers an elegant answer to an important problem in psychoanalysis and provides new insight into the sort of clinical phenomena that led Freud to move beyond the pleasure principle in the first place.