Individual and institutional defences against primitive anxieties: Counselling in prison |
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Authors: | Lynn Smith |
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Affiliation: | The Studio , Swanton Road, West Peckham, Maidstone, Kent, ME18 5JY |
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Abstract: | Abstract This paper describes a counsellor's attempts to understand the unconscious dynamics affecting the process of counselling women in prison. The social system of the prison serves to defend both prisoners and officers against powerful anxieties about the potential for sadistic attack originating from primitive states of mind, that is persecution, helplessness and destructiveness. The implications of the rigid means of defence are considered, and die role of unconscious guilt motivating the need for external punishment is briefly explored. Emphasis is placed on the role of splitting and projection in the management of potentially overwhelming feelings of guilt, and fear of punishment. The author develops the premise that there is in effect an institutional requirement that prisoners remain in the paranoid-schizoid position because of the feared consequences were they to experience depressive anxieties. |
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Keywords: | Control splitting projection guilt depressive anxieties |
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