000 01846cam a2200205 4500500
005 20250121073410.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aBen Smaïl, Nédra
_eauthor
245 0 0 _a“Jihadolescence”
260 _c2017.
500 _a32
520 _aThe author builds upon her clinical work with adolescents in Tunisia to show how, in a subjective history marked by a deficiency of the paternal function, an event of disaffiliation/delocalization,—a rupture in the social fabric, added to the disidentification towards the parental figures due to the very fact of adolescence, can leave teenagers facing a traumatic reality and an anguish of annihilation. This article emphasizes the importance to adolescence of social fabric and institutions, which play a major role, positive or negative, insofar as they constitute a possible site for clearing and repairing childhood injuries. In contrast, the clinical cases presented in this text highlight the devastating effects the teenager faces when he/she cannot find a place to welcome and accommodate his/her speech and recognize it as valid and serious. Finally, this text takes into account the trans-generational effects of the shame affect. The ideological commodification of identity, which is used as a weapon of war, serves as a piece of a puzzle to answer the affect of the parental shame inherited by the adolescents. Thus, jihad becomes a sort of psychic rearmament, and the jihadist group is the place to carry out revenge against the “anonymous oppressor.”
690 _aDjihad
690 _aidentity
690 _aTunisia
690 _aadolescence
786 0 _nFigures de la psychanalyse | o 33 | 1 | 2017-03-22 | p. 101-116 | 1623-3883
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-figures-de-la-psy-2017-1-page-101?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c488372
_d488372