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The Psychology of Totalitarianism

Audiobook
3 of 3 copies available
3 of 3 copies available
We bear witness to loneliness, free-floating anxiety, and fear giving way to censorship, loss of privacy, and surrendered freedoms. It is all spurred by a singular, focused crisis narrative that forbids dissident views and relies on destructive groupthink. Totalitarianism is not a coincidence and does not form in a vacuum. It arises from a collective psychosis that has followed a predictable script throughout history, its formation gaining strength and speed with each generation?from the Jacobins to the Nazis and Stalinists?as technology advances. Governments, mass media, and other mechanized forces use fear, loneliness, and isolation to demoralize populations and exert control, persuading large groups of people to act against their own interests, always with destructive results. In The Psychology of Totalitarianism, world-renowned Professor of Clinical Psychology Mattias Desmet deconstructs the societal conditions that allow this collective psychosis to take hold. By looking at our current situation and identifying the phenomenon of "mass formation"?a type of collective hypnosis?he clearly illustrates how close we are to surrendering to totalitarian regimes.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 23, 2022
      Clinical psychology professor Desmet (Lacan’s Logic of Subjectivity) delivers a dubious examination of “the psychological roots of totalitarianism.” Describing totalitarianism as the “logical consequence” of a “delusional belief in the omnipotence of human rationality,” Desmet discusses the concept of “mass formation,” a phenomenon in which individuals willingly sacrifice their own freedom for an amorphous collective good. He traces the “mechanistic ideology” behind totalitarianism from the Enlightenment through 19th-century imperialism and “the emergence of Nazism and Stalinism” to the rise of the climate movement and Covid-19 lockdowns. According to Desmet, public health measures to combat the spread of Covid exist on a continuum of ever-worsening social crises in which the citizenry actively choose security provided by technocrats over personal agency. He spends much of the book arguing against the conventional narrative of Covid, suggesting that it is no more dangerous than the seasonal flu and that death counts associated with the disease are overstated because they include deaths caused by underlying conditions. Though Desmet makes some intriguing points about how technological advances and the “war on terror” have undermined privacy rights, his historical analogies are disingenuous and his warnings about “subcutaneous sensors,” “synthetic wombs,” and other “technocratic medical experiment” are alarmist. This provocation misfires.

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  • English

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