Psychoanalysts, Psychologists and Psychiatrists Discuss Psychopathy and Human Evil

Book Announcement by Sheldon Itzkowitz (USA) and Elizabeth F. Howell (USA)

Evil, along with its incarnation in human form, the psychopath, remains underexamined in the psychological and psychoanalytic literature. Given current societal issues ranging from increasingly violent cultural divides to climate change, it is imperative that the topics of psychopathy and human evil be thoughtfully explored.

Co-edited by Sheldon Itzkowitz and Elizabeth F. Howell, this Routledge title brings together social scientists, psychologists, and psychoanalysts to discuss the psychology of psychopaths and the personal, societal, and cultural destruction they leave as their legacy. Chapters address such questions as: Who are psychopaths? How do they think and operate? What causes someone to commit psychopathic acts? And are psychopaths born or created? Psychopaths leave us shocked and bewildered by behavior that violates the notions of common human trust and bonding, but not all psychopaths commit crimes. Because of their unique proclivities to deceive, seduce, and dissemble, they can hide in plain sight, especially when intelligent and highly educated. This latter group comprise the “successful or corporate” psychopaths, frequently found in boardrooms of corporations and among leaders of national movements or heads of state.

Addressing a wide range of topics including slavery, genocide, the Holocaust, the individual as psychopath, the mind of the terrorist, sexual abuse, the role of attachment and the neurobiology of psychopathy, this book will appeal to researchers of human evil and psychopathy from a range of different disciplines and represents essential reading for psychotherapists and clinical psychologists.

https://www.routledge.com/Psychoanalysts-Psychologists-and-Psychiatrists-Discuss-Psychopathy-and/Itzkowitz-Howell/p/book/9780367205850

 

Sheldon Itzkowitz, PhD, ABPP, is an adjunct clinical associate professor of psychology and clinical consultant at New York University (NYU); guest faculty, the William Alanson White Institute; and faculty of the National Institute for the Psychotherpaies (NIP) and the Manhattan Institute of Psychoanalysis. A Fellow of the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation (ISSTD), he co-edited The Dissociative Mind in Psychoanalysis: Understanding and Working with Trauma.

Elizabeth F. Howell, PhD, is an adjunct clinical associate professor of psychology at NYU; faculty and clinical consultant at Manhattan Institute of Psychoanalysis; and fellow of ISSTD. She is the author of The Dissociative Mind and Understanding and Treating Dissociative Identity Disorder: A Relational Approach and co-editor of The Dissociative Mind in Psychoanalysis: Understanding and Working with Trauma.

Sheldon Itzkowitz, PhD, ABPP
295 Central Park West
New York, NY 10024
www.sheldonitzkowitzphd.com

 

 

 

 

 

Elizabeth F. Howell, PhD
280 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10010
www.elizabethhowellphd.com