|
Thought
Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of Brainwashing
in China
by Robert Jay Lifton
Click Here to
Purchase

(Excerpt) Chapter 22: Ideological Totalism
A discussion of what is most central in the thought reform
environment can lead us to a more general consideration of the
psychology of human zealotry. For in identifying, on the basis
of this study of thought reform, features common to all
expressions of ideological totalism, I wish to suggest a set of
criteria against which any environment may be judged - a basis
for answering the ever-recurring question: "Isn't this just like
'brainwashing'?"
These criteria consist of eight psychological themes which are
predominant within the social field of the thought reform
milieu. Each has a totalistic quality; each depend upon an
equally absolute philosophical assumption; and each mobilizes
certain individual emotional tendencies, mostly of a polarizing
nature. In combination they create an atmosphere which may
temporarily energize or exhilarate, but which at the same time
poses the gravest of human threats.
Milieu Control
The most basic feature of the thought reform environment, the
psychological current upon which all else depends, is the
control of human communication. Through this milieu control the
totalist environment seeks to establish domain over not only the
individual's communication with the outside (all that he sees
and hears, reads or writes, experiences, and expresses), but
also - in its penetration of his inner life - over what we may
speak of as his communication with himself. It creates an
atmosphere uncomfortably reminiscent of George Orwell's 1984.
Such milieu control never succeeds in becoming absolute, and its
own human apparatus can - when permeated by outside information
- become subject to discordant "noise" beyond that of any
mechanical apparatus. To totalist administrators, however, such
occurrences are no more than evidences of "incorrect" use of the
apparatus. For they look upon milieu control as a just and
necessary policy, one which need not be kept secret: thought
reform participants may be in doubt as to who is telling what to
whom, but the fact that extensive information about everyone is
being conveyed to the authorities is always known. At the center
of this self-justification is their assumption of omniscience,
their conviction that reality is their exclusive possession.
Having experienced the impact of what they consider to be an
ultimate truth (and having the need to dispel any possible inner
doubts of their own), they consider it their duty to create an
environment containing no more and no less than this "truth." In
order to be the engineers of the human soul, they must first
bring it under full observational control.
Mystical Manipulation
The inevitable next step after milieu control is extensive
personal manipulation. This manipulation assumes a
no-holds-barred character, and uses every possible device at the
milieu's command, no matter how bizarre or painful. Initiated
from above, it seeks to provoke specific patterns of behavior
and emotion in such a way that these will appear to have arisen
spontaneously, directed as it is by an ostensibly omniscient
group, must assume, for the manipulated, a near-mystical
quality.
Ideological totalists do not pursue this approach solely for the
purpose of maintaining a sense of power over others. Rather they
are impelled by a special kind of mystique which not only
justifies such manipulations, but makes them mandatory. Included
in this mystique is a sense of "higher purpose," of having
"directly perceived some imminent law of social development,"
and of being themselves the vanguard of this development. By
thus becoming the instruments of their own mystique, they create
a mystical aura around the manipulating institutions - the
Party, the Government, the Organization. They are the agents
"chosen" (by history, by God, or by some other supernatural
force) to carry out the "mystical imperative," the pursuit of
which must supersede all considerations of decency or of
immediate human welfare. Similarly, any thought or action which
questions the higher purpose is considered to be stimulated by a
lower purpose, to be backward, selfish, and petty in the face of
the great, overriding mission. This same mystical imperative
produces the apparent extremes of idealism and cynicism which
occur in connection with the manipulations of any totalist
environment: even those actions which seem cynical in the
extreme can be seen as having ultimate relationship to the
"higher purpose."
At the level of the individual person, the psychological
responses to this manipulative approach revolve about the basic
polarity of trust and mistrust. One is asked to accept these
manipulations on a basis of ultimate trust (or faith): "like a
child in the arms of its mother." He who trusts in this degree
can experience the manipulations within the idiom of the
mystique behind them: that is, he may welcome their
mysteriousness, find pleasure in their pain, and feel them to be
necessary for the fulfillment of the "higher purpose" which he
endorses as his own. But such elemental trust is difficult to
maintain; and even the strongest can be dissipated by constant
manipulation.
When trust gives way to mistrust (or when trust has never
existed) the higher purpose cannot serve as adequate emotional
sustenance. The individual then responds to the manipulations
through developing what I shall call the psychology of the pawn.
Feeling himself unable to escape from forces more powerful than
himself, he subordinates everything to adapting himself to them.
He becomes sensitive to all kinds of cues, expert at
anticipating environmental pressures, and skillful in riding
them in such a way that his psychological energies merge with
the tide rather than turn painfully against himself. This
requires that he participate actively in the manipulation of
others, as well as in the endless round of betrayals and
self-betrayals which are required.
But whatever his response - whether he is cheerful in the face
of being manipulated, deeply resentful, or feels a combination
of both - he has been deprived of the opportunity to exercise
his capacities for self-expression and independent action.
The Demand for Purity
In the thought reform milieu, as in all situations of
ideological totalism, the experiential world is sharply divided
into the pure and the impure, into the absolutely good and the
absolutely evil. The good and the pure are of course those
ideas, feelings, and actions which are consistent with the
totalist ideology and policy; anything else is apt to be
relegated to the bad and the impure. Nothing human is immune
from the flood of stern moral judgments. All "taints" and
"poisons" which contribute to the existing state of impurity
must be searched out and eliminated.
The philosophical assumption underlying this demand is that
absolute purity is attainable, and that anything done to anyone
in the name of this purity is ultimately moral. In actual
practice, however, no one is really expected to achieve such
perfection. Nor can this paradox be dismissed as merely a means
of establishing a high standard to which all can aspire. Thought
reform bears witness to its more malignant consequences: for by
defining and manipulating the criteria of purity, and then by
conducting an all-out war upon impurity, the ideological
totalists create a narrow world of guilt and shame. This is
perpetuated by an ethos of continuous reform, a demand that one
strive permanently and painfully for something which not only
does not exist but is in fact alien to the human condition.
At the level of the relationship between individual and
environment, the demand for purity creates what we may term a
guilty milieu and a shaming milieu. Since each man's impurities
are deemed sinful and potentially harmful to himself and to
others, he is, so to speak, expected to expect punishment -
which results in a relationship of guilt and his environment.
Similarly, when he fails to meet the prevailing standards in
casting out such impurities, he is expected to expect
humiliation and ostracism - thus establishing a relationship of
shame with his milieu. Moreover, the sense of guilt and the
sense of shame become highly-valued: they are preferred forms of
communication, objects of public competition, and the basis for
eventual bonds between the individual and his totalist accusers.
One may attempt to simulate them for a while, but the subterfuge
is likely to be detected, and it is safer to experience them
genuinely.
People vary greatly in their susceptibilities to guilt and
shame, depending upon patterns developed early in life. But
since guilt and shame are basic to human existence, this
variation can be no more than a matter of degree. Each person is
made vulnerable through his profound inner sensitivities to his
own limitations and to his unfulfilled potential; in other
words, each is made vulnerable through his existential guilt.
Since ideological totalists become the ultimate judges of good
and evil within their world, they are able to use these
universal tendencies toward guilt and shame as emotional levers
for their controlling and manipulative influences. They become
the arbiters of existential guilt, authorities without limit in
dealing with others' limitations. And their power is nowhere
more evident than in their capacity to "forgive."
The individual thus comes to apply the same totalist
polarization of good and evil to his judgments of his own
character: he tends to imbue certain aspects of himself with
excessive virtue, and condemn even more excessively other
personal qualities - all according to their ideological
standing. He must also look upon his impurities as originating
from outside influences - that is, from the ever-threatening
world beyond the closed, totalist ken. Therefore, one of his
best way to relieve himself of some of his burden of guilt is to
denounce, continuously and hostilely, these same outside
influences. The more guilty he feels, the greater his hatred,
and the more threatening they seem. In this manner, the
universal psychological tendency toward "projection" is
nourished and institutionalized, leading to mass hatreds, purges
of heretics, and to political and religious holy wars. Moreover,
once an individual person has experienced the totalist
polarization of good and evil, he has great difficulty in
regaining a more balanced inner sensitivity to the complexities
of human morality. For these is no emotional bondage greater
than that of the man whose entire guilt potential - neurotic and
existential - has become the property of ideological totalists.
The Cult of ConfessionClosely related to the demand for absolute
purity is an obsession with personal confession. Confession is
carried beyond its ordinary religious, legal, and therapeutic
expressions to the point of becoming a cult in itself. There is
the demand that one confess to crimes one has not committed, to
sinfulness that is artificially induced, in the name of a cure
that is arbitrarily imposed. Such demands are made possible not
only by the ubiquitous human tendencies toward guilt and shame
but also by the need to give expression to these tendencies. In
totalist hands, confession becomes a means of exploiting, rather
than offering solace for, these vulnerabilities.
The totalist confession takes on a number of special meanings.
It is first a vehicle for the kind of personal purification
which we have just discussed, a means of maintaining a perpetual
inner emptying or psychological purge of impurity; this purging
milieu enhances the totalists' hold upon existential guilt.
Second, it is an act of symbolic self-surrender, the expression
of the merging of individual and environment. Third, it is a
means of maintaining an ethos of total exposure - a policy of
making public (or at least known to the Organization) everything
possible about the life experiences, thoughts, and passions of
each individual, and especially those elements which might be
regarded as derogatory.
The assumption underlying total exposure (besides those which
relate to the demand for purity) is the environment's claim to
total ownership of each individual self within it. Private
ownership of the mind and its products - of imagination or of
memory - becomes highly immoral. The accompanying rationale (or
rationalization) is familiar, the milieu has attained such a
perfect state of enlightenment that any individual retention of
ideas or emotions has become anachronistic.
The cult of confession can offer the individual person
meaningful psychological satisfactions in the continuing
opportunity for emotional catharsis and for relief of suppressed
guilt feelings, especially insofar as these are associated with
self-punitive tendencies to get pleasure from personal
degradation. More than this, the sharing of confession
enthusiasms can create an orgiastic sense of "oneness," of the
most intense intimacy with fellow confessors and of the
dissolution of self into the great flow of the Movement. And
there is also, at least initially, the possibility of genuine
self-revelation and of self-betterment through the recognition
that "the thing that has been exposed is what I am."
But as totalist pressures turn confession into recurrent command
performances, the element of histrionic public display takes
precedence over genuine inner experience. Each man becomes
concerned with the effectiveness of his personal performance,
and this performance sometimes comes to serve the function of
evading the very emotions and ideas about which one feels most
guilty - confirming the statement by one of Camus' characters
that "authors of confessions write especially to avoid
confessing, to tell nothing of what they know." The difficulty,
of course, lies in the inevitable confusion which takes place
between the actor's method and his separate personal reality,
between the performer and the "real me."
In this sense, the cult of confession has effects quite the
reverse of its ideal of total exposure: rather than eliminating
personal secrets, it increases and intensifies them. In any
situation the personal secret has two important elements: first,
guilty and shameful ideas which one wishes to suppress in order
to prevent their becoming known by others or their becoming too
prominent in one's own awareness; and second, representations of
parts of oneself too precious to be expressed except when alone
or when involved in special loving relationships formed around
this shared secret world. Personal secrets are always maintained
in opposition to inner pressures toward self-exposure. The
totalist milieu makes contact with these inner pressures through
its own obsession with the expose and the unmasking process. As
a result old secrets are revived and new ones proliferate; the
latter frequently consist of resentments toward or doubts about
the Movement, or else are related to aspects of identity still
existing outside of the prescribed ideological sphere. Each
person becomes caught up in a continuous conflict over which
secrets to preserve and which to surrender, over ways to reveal
lesser secrets in order to protect more important ones; his own
boundaries between the secret and the known, between the public
and the private, become blurred. And around one secret, or a
complex of secrets, there may revolve an ultimate inner struggle
between resistance and self-surrender.
Finally, the cult of confession makes it virtually impossible to
attain a reasonable balance between worth and humility. The
enthusiastic and aggressive confessor becomes like Camus'
character whose perpetual confession is his means of judging
others: "[I]…practice the profession of penitent to be able to
end up as a judge…the more I accuse myself, the more I have a
right to judge you." The identity of the "judge-penitent" thus
becomes a vehicle for taking on some of the environment's
arrogance and sense of omnipotence. Yet even this shared
omnipotence cannot protect him from the opposite (but not
unrelated) feelings of humiliation and weakness, feelings
especially prevalent among those who remain more the enforced
penitent than the all-powerful judge.
The "Sacred Science"
The totalist milieu maintains an aura of sacredness around its
basic dogma, holding it out as an ultimate moral vision for the
ordering of human existence. This sacredness is evident in the
prohibition (whether or not explicit) against the questioning of
basic assumptions, and in the reverence which is demanded for
the originators of the Word, the present bearers of the Word,
and the Word itself. While thus transcending ordinary concerns
of logic, however, the milieu at the same time makes an
exaggerated claim of airtight logic, of absolute "scientific"
precision. Thus the ultimate moral vision becomes an ultimate
science; and the man who dares to criticize it, or to harbor
even unspoken alternative ideas, becomes not only immoral and
irreverent, but also "unscientific." In this way, the
philosopher kings of modern ideological totalism reinforce their
authority by claiming to share in the rich and respected
heritage of natural science.
The assumption here is not so much that man can be God, but
rather that man's ideas can be God: that an absolute science of
ideas (and implicitly, an absolute science of man) exists, or is
at least very close to being attained; that this science can be
combined with an equally absolute body of moral principles; and
that the resulting doctrine is true for all men at all times.
Although no ideology goes quite this far in overt statement,
such assumptions are implicit in totalist practice.
At the level of the individual, the totalist sacred science can
offer much comfort and security. Its appeal lies in its seeming
unification of the mystical and the logical modes of experience
(in psychoanalytic terms, of the primary and secondary thought
processes). For within the framework of the sacred science, and
sweeping, non-rational "insights." Since the distinction between
the logical and the mystical is, to begin with, artificial and
man-made, an opportunity for transcending it can create an
extremely intense feeling of truth. But the posture of
unquestioning faith - both rationally and non-rationally derived
- is not easy to sustain, especially if one discovers that the
world of experience is not nearly as absolute as the sacred
science claims it to be.
Yet so strong a hold can the sacred science achieve over his
mental processes that if one begins to feel himself attracted to
ideas which either contradict or ignore it, he may become guilty
and afraid. His quest for knowledge is consequently hampered,
since in the name of science he is prevented from engaging in
the receptive search for truth which characterizes the genuinely
scientific approach. And his position is made more difficult by
the absence, in a totalist environment, of any distinction
between the sacred and the profane: there is no thought or
action which cannot be related to the sacred science. To be
sure, one can usually find areas of experience outside its
immediate authority; but during periods of maximum totalist
activity (like thought reform) any such areas are cut off, and
there is virtually no escape from the milieu's ever-pressing
edicts and demands. Whatever combination of continued adherence,
inner resistance, or compromise co-existence the individual
person adopts toward this blend of counterfeit science and
back-door religion, it represents another continuous pressure
toward personal closure, toward avoiding, rather than grappling
with, the kinds of knowledge and experience necessary for
genuine self-expression and for creative development.
Loading the Language
The language of the totalist environment is characterized by the
thought-terminating cliché. The most far-reaching and complex of
human problems are compressed into brief, highly reductive,
definitive-sounding phrases, easily memorized and easily
expressed. These become the start and finish of any ideological
analysis. In [Chinese Communist] thought reform, for instance,
the phrase "bourgeois mentality" is used to encompass and
critically dismiss ordinarily troublesome concerns like the
quest for individual expression, the exploration of alternative
ideas, and the search for perspective and balance in political
judgments. And in addition to their function as interpretive
shortcuts, these cliches become what Richard Weaver has called
"ultimate terms" : either "god terms," representative of
ultimate good; or "devil terms," representative of ultimate
evil. In [Chinese Communist] thought reform, "progress,"
"progressive," "liberation," "proletarian standpoints" and "the
dialectic of history" fall into the former category;
"capitalist," "imperialist," "exploiting classes," and
"bourgeois" (mentality, liberalism, morality, superstition,
greed) of course fall into the latter. Totalist language then,
is repetitiously centered on all-encompassing jargon,
prematurely abstract, highly categorical, relentlessly judging,
and to anyone but its most devoted advocate, deadly dull: in
Lionel Trilling's phrase, "the language of nonthought."
To be sure, this kind of language exists to some degree within
any cultural or organizational group, and all systems of belief
depend upon it. It is in part an expression of unity and
exclusiveness: as Edward Sapir put it, "'He talks like us' is
equivalent to saying 'He is one of us.'" The loading is much
more extreme in ideological totalism, however, since the jargon
expresses the claimed certitudes of the sacred science. Also
involved is an underlying assumption that language - like all
other human products - can be owned and operated by the
Movement. No compunctions are felt about manipulating or loading
it in any fashion; the only consideration is its usefulness to
the cause.
For an individual person, the effect of the language of
ideological totalism can be summed up in one word: constriction.
He is, so to speak, linguistically deprived; and since language
is so central to all human experience, his capacities for
thinking and feeling are immensely narrowed. This is what Hu
meant when he said, "using the same pattern of words for so
long…you feel chained." Actually, not everyone exposed feels
chained, but in effect everyone is profoundly confined by these
verbal fetters. As in other aspects of totalism, this loading
may provide an initial sense of insight and security, eventually
followed by uneasiness. This uneasiness may result in a retreat
into a rigid orthodoxy in which an individual shouts the
ideological jargon all the louder in order to demonstrate his
conformity, hide his own dilemma and his despair, and protect
himself from the fear and guilt he would feel should he attempt
to use words and phrases other than the correct ones. Or else he
may adapt a complex pattern of inner division, and dutifully
produce the expected cliché's in public performances while in
his private moments he searches for more meaningful avenues of
expression. Either way, his imagination becomes increasingly
dissociated from his actual life experiences and may tend to
atrophy from disuse.
Doctrine Over Person
This sterile language reflects characteristic feature of
ideological totalism: the subordination of human experience to
the claims of doctrine. This primacy of doctrine over person is
evident in the continual shift between experience itself and the
highly abstract interpretation of such experience - between
genuine feelings and spurious cataloguing of feelings. It has
much to do with the peculiar aura of half-reality which totalist
environment seems, at least to the outsider, to possess.
The inspiriting force of such myths cannot be denied; nor can
one ignore their capacity for mischief. For when the myth
becomes fused with the totalist sacred science, the resulting
"logic" can be so compelling and coercive that it simply
replaces the realities of individual experience. Consequently,
past historical events are retrospectively altered, wholly
rewritten, or ignored, to make them consistent with the
doctrinal logic. This alteration becomes especially malignant
when its distortions are imposed upon individual memory as
occurred in the false confession extracted during thought
reform.
The same doctrinal primacy prevails in the totalist approach to
changing people: the demand that character and identity be
reshaped, not in accordance with one's special nature or
potentialities, but rather to fit the rigid contours of the
doctrinal mold. The human is thus subjected to the ahuman. And
in this manner, the totalists, as Camus phrases it, "put an
abstract idea above human life, even if they call it history, to
which they themselves have submitted in advance and to which
they will decide arbitrarily, to submit everyone else as well."
The underlying assumption is that the doctrine - including its
mythological elements - is ultimately more valid, true, and real
than is any aspect of actual human character or human
experience. Thus, even when circumstances require that a
totalist movement follow a course of action in conflict with or
outside of the doctrine, there exists what Benjamin Schwartz
described as a "will to orthodoxy" which requires an elaborate
facade of new rationalizations designed to demonstrate the
unerring consistency of the doctrine and the unfailing foresight
which it provides. But its greater importance lies in more
hidden manifestations, particularly the totalists' pattern of
imposing their doctrine-dominated remolding upon people in order
to seek confirmation of (and again, dispel their own doubts
about) this same doctrine. Rather than modify the myth in
accordance with experience, the will to orthodoxy requires
instead that men be modified in order to reaffirm the myth.
The individual person who finds himself under such
doctrine-dominated pressure to change is thrust into an intense
struggle with his own sense of integrity, a struggle which takes
place in relation to polarized feelings of sincerity and
insincerity. In a totalist environment, absolute "sincerity" is
demanded; and the major criterion for sincerity is likely to be
one's degree of doctrinal compliance - both in regard to belief
and to direction of personal change. Yet there is always the
possibility of retaining an alternative version of sincerity
(and of reality), the capacity to imagine a different kind of
existence and another form of sincere commitment. These
alternative visions depend upon such things as the strength of
previous identity, the penetration of the milieu by outside
ideas, and the retained capacity for eventual individual
renewal. The totalist environment, however, counters such
"deviant" tendencies with the accusation that they stem entirely
from personal "problems" ("thought problems" or "ideological
problems") derived from untoward earlier influences. The outcome
will depend largely upon how much genuine relevance the doctrine
has for the individual emotional predicament. And even for those
to whom it seems totally appealing, the exuberant sense of
well-being it temporarily affords may be more a "delusion of
wholeness" than an expression of true and lasting inner harmony.
The Dispensing of Existence
The totalist environment draws a sharp line between those whose
right to existence can be recognized, and those who possess no
such right.
Are not men presumtuous to appoint themselves the dispensers of
human existence? Surely this is a flagrant expression of what
the Greeks called hubris, of arrogant man making himself God.
Yet one underlying assumption makes this arrogance mandatory:
the conviction that there is just one path to true existence,
just one valid mode of being, and that all others are perforce
invalid and false. Totalists thus feel themselves compelled to
destroy all possibilities of false existence as a means of
furthering the great plan of true existence to which they are
committed.
For the individual, the polar emotional conflict is the ultimate
existential one of "being versus nothingness." He is likely to
be drawn to a conversion experience, which he sees as the only
means of attaining a path of existence for the future. The
totalist environment - even when it does not resort to physical
abuse - thus stimulates in everyone a fear of extinction or
annihilation. A person can overcome this fear and find (in
martin Buber's term) "confirmation," not in his individual
relationships, but only from the fount of all existence, the
totalist Organization. Existence comes to depend upon creed (I
believe, therefore I am), upon submission (I obey, therefore I
am) and beyond these, upon a sense of total merger with the
ideological movement. Ultimately of course one compromises and
combines the totalist "confirmation" with independent elements
of personal identity; but one is ever made aware that, should he
stray too far along this "erroneous path," his right to
existence may be withdrawn.
The more clearly an environment expresses these eight
psychological themes, the greater its resemblance to ideological
totalism; and the more it utilizes such totalist devices to
change people, the greater its resemblance to thought reform.
But facile comparisons can be misleading. No milieu ever
achieves complete totalism, and many relatively moderate
environments show some signs of it. Moreover, totalism tends to
be recurrent rather than continuous. But if totalism has at any
time been prominent in the movement, there is always the
possibility of its reappearance, even after long periods of
relative moderation.
Then, too, some environments come perilously close to totalism
but at the same time keep alternative paths open; this
combination can offer unusual opportunities for achieving
intellectual and emotional depth. And even the most full-blown
totalist milieu can provide (more or less despite itself) a
valuable and enlarging life experience - if the man exposed has
both the opportunity to leave the extreme environment and the
inner capacity to absorb and make inner use of the totalist
pressures.
Also, ideological totalism itself may offer a man an intense
peak experience: a sense of transcending all that is ordinary
and prosaic, of freeing himself from the encumbrances of human
ambivalence, of entering a sphere of truth, reality, and
sincerity beyond any he had ever known or even imagined. But
these peak experiences, carry a great potential for rebound, and
for equally intense opposition to the very things which
initially seem so liberating. Such imposed peak experiences - as
contrasted with those more freely and privately arrived at by
great religious leaders and mystics - are essentially
experiences of personal closure. Rather than stimulating greater
receptivity and "openness to the world," they encourage a
backward step into some form of "embeddedness" - a retreat into
doctrinal patterns more characteristic (at least at this stage
of human history) of the child than of the individuated adult.
And if no peak experience occurs, ideological totalism does even
greater violence to the human potential: it evokes destructive
emotions, produces intellectual and psychological constrictions,
and deprives men of all that is most subtle and imaginative -
under the false promise of eliminating those very imperfections
and ambivalences which help to define the human condition. This
combination of personal closure, self-destructiveness, and
hostility toward outsiders leads to the dangerous group excesses
so characteristic of ideological totalism in any form. It also
mobilizes extremist tendencies in those outsiders under attack,
thus creating a vicious circle of totalism.
What is the source of ideological totalism? How do these
extremist emotional patterns originate? These questions raise
the most crucial and the most difficult of human problems.
Behind ideological totalism lies the ever-present human quest
for the omnipotent guide - for the supernatural force, political
party, philosophical ideas, great leader, or precise science -
that will bring ultimate solidarity to all men and eliminate the
terror of death and nothingness. This quest is evident in the
mythologies, religions, and histories of all nations, as well as
in every individual life. The degree of individual totalism
involved depends greatly upon factors in one's personal history:
early lack of trust, extreme environmental chaos, total
domination by a parent or parent-representative, intolerable
burdens of guilt, and severe crises of identity. Thus an early
sense of confusion and dislocation, or an early experience of
unusually intense family milieu control, can produce later a
complete intolerance for confusion and dislocation, and a
longing for the reinstatement of milieu control. But these
things are in some measure part of every childhood experience;
and therefore the potential for totalism is a continuum from
which no one entirely escapes, and in relationship to which no
two people are exactly the same.
It may be that the capacity for totalism is most fundamentally a
product of human childhood itself, of the prolonged period of
helplessness and dependency through which each of us must pass.
Limited as he is, the infant has no choice but to imbue his
first nurturing authorities - his parents - with an exaggerated
omnipotence, until the time he is himself capable of some degree
of independent action and judgment. And even as he develops into
the child and the adolescent, he continues to require many of
the all-or-none polarities of totalism as terms with which to
define his intellectual, emotional, and moral worlds. Under
favorable circumstances (that is, when family and culture
encourage individuation) these requirements can be replaced by
more flexible and moderate tendencies; but they never entirely
disappear.
During adult life, individual totalism takes on new contours as
it becomes associated with new ideological interests. It may
become part of the configuration of personal emotions, messianic
ideas, and organized mass movement which I have described as
ideological totalism. When it does, we cannot speak of it as
simply as ideological regression. It is partly this, but it is
also something more: a new form of adult embeddedness,
originating in patterns of security-seeking carried over from
childhood, but with qualities of ideas and aspirations that are
specifically adult. During periods of cultural crisis and of
rapid historical change, the totalist quest for the omnipotent
guide leads men to seek to become that guide.
Totalism, then, is a widespread phenomenon, but it is not the
only approach to re-education. We can best use our knowledge of
it by applying its criteria to familiar processes in our own
cultural tradition and in our own country.
Click Here to
Purchase
Back to
Cult Recovery Books
Back to
Recommended Books Index
One method of
helping to support our non-profit organization is to purchase the books you need for your
research via our website. As an affiliate of Amazon.com we get a
percentage of every book we sell on
their behalf.
Reviews are
not by FACTNet staff
|