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D**O
An Excellent Exploration of the Sources of Violence
As a psychotherapist, Rollo May brings in many of his own cases, buttressed by pertinent external studies, to show the rage often buried deep within those who feel wholly disenfranchised and thus powerless. He explores how so many of these poor folks often create a fantasy world in which they can achieve significance and power-- with the danger that their retreat into such unreality can become a permanent pass through the looking-glass with no exit. The alternative, as he points out, is far too often "madness" (rage) AND "madness" (insanity)-- with deadly violence as its evil fruit. May avoids the psycho-babble and jargon to often found in psychotherapeutic studies and breaks down complex concepts to make them readily digestible to the layman with an interest in the subject-- all while maintaining a certain critical distance so that he may proffer theories worthy of future research.
J**F
Four Stars
Book was just as promised.
K**E
Great Author!
I bought this for a gift for someone who works as a psychologist and they told me his books are fantastic!
A**G
The Roots of Violence
Culture is more violent than ever. Mass shootings happen almost daily. The U.S. military-industrial complex spreads war to every corner of the world. Extreme patriarchal values celebrate strength, individualism, zero-sum scenarios, hyper-masculinity, and aggression over grace, community, communication, cooperation, love, and peace.Society's out-of-control violence is a loud alarm screaming that things have gone seriously awry.With Power and Innocence, May delivers an incisive look at violence, from a psychological to a cultural phenomenon, and he searches for ways to mitigate the pains.In his inquiry, May makes many fascinating observations:*self-assertion and validation are critical to the healthy ego*if aggressiveness or autonomy is blocked as a child, individuals tend to remain dependent*if power is not expressed constructively, it will emerge destructively*communication breakdown is a common source of violence*violence is usually a "last resort" in the human quest for significance and power*violence can be a symptom of a hostile cultureGenerally, May suggests violence emerges from feelings of "less-than-humanness", powerlessness, hopelessness, or homelessness in society and he identifies community as the saving grace, offering members mutual mental, physical, and spiritual nourishment.As usual, May offers a warm, accessible, and deeply incisive look at his subject.One book from Rollo May contains more wisdom than 1,000 books from lesser authors.
C**G
Powerlessness is dangerous business
The extraordinary thing about Rollo May's Power and Innocence: A Search for the Sources of Violence (1972) is that it has as much to say about Columbine, Virginia Tech, the Oklahoma Federal Building, Iraq, Afghanistan, Martin and Zimmerman, Snowden, and Syria as it does Charles Fairweather, Vietnam, Kent State, Frantz Fanon, and Daniel Ellsberg. All you need to do to update it is to plug-in new names. The thesis is as good as ever: Reducing an individual, a group or a nation state to a subhuman nonentity will lead to violence.The reason that most people - and many countries - never make the connection between losses of self-esteem and violence is that it is a slow-burning process:"Violence is like the sudden chemical change that occurs when, following a relatively placid period, water breaks into a boil. If we do not see the burner underneath that has been heating the water, we mistake the violence for a discrete happenstance. We fail to see that the violence is an entirely understandable outcome of personalities fighting against odds in a repressive culture that does not help them."Because May was trained as a psychologist, many of his insights are scientific in nature. But the hallmark of this book and all of the other great titles by May is the author's breadth as a humanist and writer. He intersperses case studies from his psychotherapy practice with meditations on current events, philosophy, literature and art to produce a narrative that is surprisingly easy to read. No matter where May is in the book, he always seems to reach for the right block.In the final two chapters, May focuses on the importance of humility, compassion and understanding. Leaving someone out - whether it is the awkward kid in the schoolyard or a country that's been demonized - is dangerous business for everyone.I don't know who has been paying for Dennis Rodman's flights to Korea, but the State Department might want to think seriously about picking up his next tab.
B**D
The power within us - be not afraid
The message from the author: Everyone has a power within them that is a basic need for survival. It expresses itself first crudely as the screams of a baby asking for or demanding that a need be met. As e grow, the method of excercising power becomes more sophisticated, but it is always there. It can erupt into violence when an individual feels threatened or abandoned. The mistake is when people pretend that they don't have this power and repress. The unconscious will bring it out, mostly in neurotic behavior, but sometimes n violent outbursts. We are afraid of our own power because we know what we can potentially do with it, as contemplated in our fantasies. Awareness, as with so many things, is the key. And to exercise your power wisely and when necessary, opens the door.
A**R
Power and Innocence
What I do not like about this version (kindred eBook) are many of these mispelling of words and also sometimes very poorly chosen strange notes (Not within the book) which were optional to see. You could turn these on and off within the options of the Kindle App. I am not an english native speaker, so it still helped me, yet still.The content of these books of him are great and often I thought this dude knows so much, in this book especially. It also deepens so well my understanding of american culture and connected for me art with psychology. I would also highly recommend watching the interview found on YouTube of Jeffrey Mishlove and him.
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