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The Untouched Key

Tracing Childhood Trauma in Creativity and Destructiveness

Alice Miller

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Paperback

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English
Virago Press Ltd
02 March 1996
Alice Miller has achieved worldwide recognition for her work on the causes and effects of child abuse; on violence towards children and its cost to society. For more than twenty years she taught and practised psychoanalysis; now she questions the validity of psychoanalytic theories and common psychiatric methods.

THE UNTOUCHED KEY is a powerful and provocative synthesis of Alice Miller's ideas and experience. With her usual impeccable clarity, insight and logic she explores the clues- often overlooked in biography- connecting unnoticed childhood trauma to adult creativity and destructiveness. What did Picasso express in 'Guernica'

Why did Buster Keaton never smile

Why did Nietzsche lose his mind for eleven years

Why did Hitler become a mass murderer

Her conclusions reveal the roots and consequences of our centuries-old existence on obeying repressive parental figures- including psychiatrists and psychotherapists- and challenge us to unlock the door to our true childhood history in order to regain our lost awareness and our full life.
By:  
Imprint:   Virago Press Ltd
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 198mm,  Width: 126mm,  Spine: 200mm
Weight:   150g
ISBN:   9781853811876
ISBN 10:   1853811874
Pages:   192
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Unknown

For more 20 years Alice Miller taught and practised psychoanalysis but now questions its validity; In 1988 she left the International Psychoanalytical Association and has earned international recognition for her work on child abuse, violence towards children and its cost to society.

Reviews for The Untouched Key: Tracing Childhood Trauma in Creativity and Destructiveness

That childhood experiences are the key to adult actions is Miller's recurring theme, and here she says it again - as clearly and passionately as always. Miller has been a psychoanalyst for more than 20 years, so it comes as no surprise that she looks to childhood for the sources of adult anxiety and destructive behavior. Where she departs from traditional psychoanalytic thought - and the gap grows broader with every book - is in insisting that the influential events of infancy and childhood are real events, not displacements or projections, not symbols or fantasies. She has developed this thesis eloquently in earlier books - For Your Own Good: Hidden Cruelty in Child-Rearing and the Roots of Violence (1983) among them - looking at the childhoods of antisocial personalities (including Adolph Hitler). In this volume, she studies the childhoods of artists and intellects like Picasso, Kathe Kollwitz, Buster Keaton, and Nietzsche. Her findings help to explain why some children, although abused or neglected, become creative adults, while others repeat the pattern of pain and cruelty. Almost always in the former picture is one sympathetic adult. Miller's talent is to take the complexities that shape a human being and present them in simple - sometimes deceptively simple - terms. The reader will look with new eyes at the paintings of Picasso, the films of Buster Keaton, indeed the work of any favorite artist. (Kirkus Reviews)


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