Weaponization of the body and politicization of death

The paper examines the psychology of martyrdom through the analysis of death speeches, the final letters, wills, and testaments left behind by men in the Middle East who undertook suicidal missions in war. The author maintains that the human body is as much a social object as it is a biological enti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Siamak Movahedi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Associação Universitária de Pesquisa em Psicopatologia Fundamental 2009-03-01
Series:Revista Latinoamericana de Psicopatologia Fundamental
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1415-47142009000100006&lng=en&tlng=en
id doaj-00541c19d0584e4e8a881a7277c0fdd2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-00541c19d0584e4e8a881a7277c0fdd22020-11-24T22:28:13ZengAssociação Universitária de Pesquisa em Psicopatologia FundamentalRevista Latinoamericana de Psicopatologia Fundamental1984-03812009-03-01121719810.1590/S1415-47142009000100006S1415-47142009000100006Weaponization of the body and politicization of deathSiamak MovahediThe paper examines the psychology of martyrdom through the analysis of death speeches, the final letters, wills, and testaments left behind by men in the Middle East who undertook suicidal missions in war. The author maintains that the human body is as much a social object as it is a biological entity, and death is as much a social event as it is a physical happening. The biologically living body may be symbolically dead, and the physically dead person may be more powerful than the living. A communication that a person makes while he or she is anticipating an impending death is an overloaded message, comparable to the first or the last dream in psychoanalysis. It may provide important clues not only to the person's immediate psychic experience, but also to one's characteristic mode of encounter with the object world. Final letters, near-death or suicide notes have a particularly demanding, commanding, and pleading quality. The author finds several modes of communication and metacommunication in the notes: disengaged, abstract, and intimate, each differently conveying their thoughts, fantasies, and relatedness to the world, God, justice, vengeance, death, immortality, loved ones, and enemies.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1415-47142009000100006&lng=en&tlng=enPsicología del martiriopalabras ultimasmisiones suicidasusos del cuerpo
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Siamak Movahedi
spellingShingle Siamak Movahedi
Weaponization of the body and politicization of death
Revista Latinoamericana de Psicopatologia Fundamental
Psicología del martirio
palabras ultimas
misiones suicidas
usos del cuerpo
author_facet Siamak Movahedi
author_sort Siamak Movahedi
title Weaponization of the body and politicization of death
title_short Weaponization of the body and politicization of death
title_full Weaponization of the body and politicization of death
title_fullStr Weaponization of the body and politicization of death
title_full_unstemmed Weaponization of the body and politicization of death
title_sort weaponization of the body and politicization of death
publisher Associação Universitária de Pesquisa em Psicopatologia Fundamental
series Revista Latinoamericana de Psicopatologia Fundamental
issn 1984-0381
publishDate 2009-03-01
description The paper examines the psychology of martyrdom through the analysis of death speeches, the final letters, wills, and testaments left behind by men in the Middle East who undertook suicidal missions in war. The author maintains that the human body is as much a social object as it is a biological entity, and death is as much a social event as it is a physical happening. The biologically living body may be symbolically dead, and the physically dead person may be more powerful than the living. A communication that a person makes while he or she is anticipating an impending death is an overloaded message, comparable to the first or the last dream in psychoanalysis. It may provide important clues not only to the person's immediate psychic experience, but also to one's characteristic mode of encounter with the object world. Final letters, near-death or suicide notes have a particularly demanding, commanding, and pleading quality. The author finds several modes of communication and metacommunication in the notes: disengaged, abstract, and intimate, each differently conveying their thoughts, fantasies, and relatedness to the world, God, justice, vengeance, death, immortality, loved ones, and enemies.
topic Psicología del martirio
palabras ultimas
misiones suicidas
usos del cuerpo
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1415-47142009000100006&lng=en&tlng=en
work_keys_str_mv AT siamakmovahedi weaponizationofthebodyandpoliticizationofdeath
_version_ 1725747253756297216