Talk:Lloyd deMause
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Satanic Ritual Abuse Hysteria Participant
[edit]It should be noted somewhere in this article that deMause was a contributor to the whole Satanic Ritual Abuse hysteria of the early 1990s, in part via his article "Why Cults Terrorize and Kill Children" (often cited by the SRA folks, as for instance here - ritualabuse.us/ritualabuse/articles/why-cults-terrorize-and-kill-children-lloyd-demause-the-journal-of-psychohistory/). Now that the truth is finally coming out about the falsity of the vast majority of the ritual abuse claims, the innocence of most of the defendants, and the excesses of the prosecutions that took place, his part in trying to give it some legitimacy should be noted. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.178.28.18 (talk) 22:16, 24 September 2010 (UTC)
China footbinding
[edit]"Highly influential" is hard to measure. A list of people he has influenced would be useful.
As far as I can tell, deMause's theory rests on Freudian psychoanalysis; if Freud was wrong about, for example, transference, deMause's results dissolve, since they're based on that.
He also seems (from very brief research) to be generalizing too wildly. For example, I found a paper of his that comments about China in ways that assume that foot-binding was a universal practice. A little research shows that it varied over time and space--being more common in northern than southern China, more common among aristocrats than among the poor who do most of the work, and discouraged by and under the Mongols. (See [1]). Vicki Rosenzweig, Tuesday, June 4, 2002
- He may also be completely wrong about the impact of footbinding on China's cultural evolution. But that's unimportant because China is peripheral to his theories. China isn't something he studied much, probably because it's a basketcase as far as cultural evolution goes.
- And in any case, nothing I've read of his requires that footbinding in China be universal, it only requires it to be very prevalent. Just like there's no need for infanticide to have been universal at some point in the past to have made a critical impact on those people's psyche.
- Regarding Freud. It is not fair to say that deMause's work relies on Freud since he spends some time shredding the guy, in addition to disproving things like the Oedipal complex. It is fair to say that deMause's work depends on psychoanalysis, at least methodologically. It's also fair to say that the theory rests on transferance but that is nothing surprising or earth-shattering in any way.
- Saying that "if transference is wrong the deMause's results dissolve" is much like saying "if the force of gravity is wrong then superstrings theory dissolves". You're not exactly giving what a psychologist would consider a realistic example. It's not like there's any doubt, let alone controversy, on whether transferance exists. – ark
- deMause is indeed a leading figure, but his claims to have "invented" Psychohistory are a bit of an overstatement. The field evolved out of some of Freud's own writings, such as "History and its Discontents," as well as the works of many others such as Louis Namier and Fawn Brodie. In canvassing various listservs and newsgroups devoted to the field, I have found that deMause and his supporters dominate these discussions and some of deMause's writings (books, articles and opinions on the aforementioned message groups) seem to indicate an unwillingness to be open to other psychohistorical interpretations or methods. This intractability strikes me as less than scholarly.
- —Preceding unsigned comment added by Frenchfriar (talk • contribs)
DEMAUSE REPLIES TO INACCURACIES
[edit]Much of what appears in these pages on psychohistory and on myself is inaccurate. I have nowhere said I "created the academic field of psychohistory," and would not say so, since Freud and Fromm and many other early psychoanalysts wrote psychohistorical studies ("psychohistory" being the study of historical motivations). I nowhere argue that "mainstream anthropologists are advocates of pedophilia," only that they often claim the widespread sexual use of children by the groups they study is merely a "cultural practice" that cannot be called pedophilia because the society itself does not label it pedophilia. I nowhere claim footbinding in China is universal. To call my writing "less than scholarly" because I have "an unwillingness to be open to other psychohistorical interpretations" is certainly inaccurate because I have spent four decades publishing hundreds of scholars who disagree with me in both my Journal of Psychohistory and Journal of Psychoanalytic Anthropology. Nor am I accurately described as "a psychologist," since I majored at Columbia University for seven years in political science and was further trained at a psychoanalytic institute. Interested readers who are interested in learning accurately about myself and psychohistory are directed to the dozen articles and three full books (with thousands of scholarly references) on www.psychohistory.com. --Lloyd deMause
—Preceding unsigned comment added by 165.247.47.53 (talk)
- Why don't you correct the articles on yourself and psychohistory then? You could do that, you know.
- Yeah i have to agree with Lloyd deMause here. This man above is ranting. Freud still hasnt been discredited.
- —Preceding unsigned comment added by Operationinfinitebananas (talk • contribs)
- Why was deMause's comment copied into the article? It refers to assertions made on this talk page, not to the article (or perhaps to some old version of the article?), and is in no way a famous quote or a quote that especially characterizes his work, so it doesn't belong there. And where's that pedophilia misquote he refers to? --84.188.134.80 20:21, 19 August 2005 (UTC)
Lloyd deMause writes: "I nowhere claim footbinding in China is universal.". Lamentably this is not true. In his article 'The History of Child Abuse' published in The Journal of Psychohistory 25 (3) in Winter 1998 [2] Mr de Mause states that “Even the universal practice of foot binding was for sexual purposes, with a girl undergoing extremely painful crushing of the bones of her feet for years in order that men could make love to her big toe as a fetish, a penis-substitute.” With best regards Dr. Boris Scharlowski 194.162.140.66 13:14, 27 September 2005 (UTC)
For the record, subjects of articles generally shouldn't edit them. See Wikipedia:Conflict of interest. -- Beland (talk) 05:39, 30 July 2021 (UTC)
POV
[edit]This guys ideas seem to be basically taking modern ideas and projecting them into the past. I wouldn't be surprised to see him speak of Ancient Greeks using mopeds and cell phones. We need to get some criticism in here, and I intend to look for some references in this regard.
I removed statement about him being influential in the field, as I am not convinced the field consists of anything other than his invention and there are no references outside his material given at all. --DanielCD 15:29, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
Here's one that seems to be somewhat on the mark: [3]
—Preceding unsigned comment added by DanielCD (talk • contribs)
NPOV tag
[edit]It’s incredible that in only three paragraphs there is no NPOV account of Lloyd De Mause and psychohistory. —Cesar Tort 23:02, 8 April 2006 (UTC)
DeMause a serious thinker
[edit]RE the criticisms above about deMause and his "supporters": I am a writer who has studied intellectual gurus and cranks for decades. Over the past 15 years I have attended many IPA conferences and study groups, and have spent much time in discussions with leading IPA members. I did so not in search of another guru type to study but because of my own interest in psychohistorical issues. However, my antenna are always alert to weirdness. I wish to state that I observed nothing in and around the IPA that would lead me to believe that LD is a guru surrounded by uncritical disciples; that the IPA or LD himself are intolerant of opposing views within psychohistory; or that the IPA comprises an isolated group that mimics academic respectability by mostly citing its own members. Conference papers and Journal of Psychohistory articles are full of citations (and the influence) of rival viewpoints within psychohistory, such as that of Robert Jay Lifton. People within the IPA frequently and robustly disagree with LD and with each other (often heatedly), and I observed no system of sanctions or atmosphere of disapproval to militate against such free debate.
Given the high quality of analysis in many journal articles; the credentials of the scholars and professionals who participate in the journal and the IPA; and the openness of debate, I am convinced that the IPA and the scholars around it such as deMause, Beisel, Atlas, Elovitz and Lawton are serious intellectuals. They may be wrong in some of their hypotheses--and certainly they need to stimulate field research if they wish to overcome the skepticism surrounding psychohistory in general--but they do not deserve certain of the exaggerated criticisms found earlier in this discussion.
I made some additions to the article (April 8) in an effort to provide a clearer description of deMause's theories. I did this not as a "supporter" of deMause (like many IPA members I agree with him on some things but not on others) but to provide a framework for future development of this article along NPOV lines.
dking (Dennis King) 8 April 2006
—Preceding unsigned comment added by 152.163.101.6 (talk)
Devolution
[edit]The term 'devolution' appears to be used incorrectly in the sentence: "He has written many books about changes in the human psyche in historical times that he believes were produced by progressive development (and/or devolution) in childrearing practices.
As far as i understand it, it is being used in the context of Devolution (fallacy) rather than devolution. I've changed it to the correct evolution. However, this may not be contextually appropriate either. Perhaps someone with a greater insight to deMause's work could reword. Rockpocket 17:13, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
- I changed "devolution" to "regressive changes", which was the meaning I intended by using the former term. -- dking (Dennis King) 8 June 2006
- —Preceding unsigned comment added by 152.163.101.6 (talk)
Psychohistory
[edit]I'm adding a deffinition of Psychohistory to the second paragraph.149.165.90.22 15:49, 16 August 2006 (UTC)
critics
[edit]the statement "these people do not counter deMause's massive evidence by any of their own research. Nor do they mention deMause's four decades of publications:" at best requires a citation. who are these people? what original research exists in the positive that can be countered or reproduced? and four decades of publications doesn't mean much to me. what was the peer review process?
Carlo C.Butterlover 16:32, 30 July 2007 (UTC)
- Agreed. I've added citation. —Cesar Tort 17:14, 30 July 2007 (UTC)
- What is the purpose of noting Cunningham's objections to de Mause? Cunningham's own work has been critiqued.
- It is to be expected that someone would voice an objection to an influential work like The History of Childhood. In this article, a single instance of critique is used to support the statement that historians are hostile to deMause's work, which suggests some kind of consensus amongst historians (and against deMause) that does not exist.
- The refernece should be removed or rewritten. --Biaothanatoi (talk) 23:18, 15 January 2008 (UTC)
Content fork
[edit]The following looks like a content fork - the page is about deMause, and while his work is going to be part of the page, the core should be the man and his life, not an explanation of his theory. This content might be more fruitfully integrated into the Psychohistory main page, right now the page is almost exclusively about the theory of psychohistory, and virtually nothing about the man beyond what is in the lead and info box.
Also note that in my trimmings, I had removed bibliographical items that were duplicated in the footnotes, in removing this information I may have removed some of the footnotes and now the bibliography section is missing content.
Psychohistory, the study of the psychological motivations of historical events, remains a controversial field of study, and deMause and other IPA scholars have detractors in the academic community. Some historians and anthropologists claim that deMause's own formulations are insufficiently supported by credible research.[1] DeMause believes that his detractors are not largely moved by any evidence, but rather are unconsciously motivated to attack those who would challenge the idea of "good parenting" throughout the many of cultures.[1]
The conflict of new and old psychoclasses is also pivotal in Demausean thought. This is reflected, for instance, in the clash between Blue State (presumably the new psychoclass) and Red State voters in the contemporary United States.[2] Another key concept is that of group fantasy, which deMause regards as a mediating force between a psychoclass's collective childhood experiences (and the psychic conflicts emerging therefrom) and the psychoclass's behavior in politics, religion and other aspects of social life.[3]
The History of Childhood is often linked to Edward Shorter's The Making of the Modern Family and Lawrence Stone's The Family, Sex and Marriage in England 1500-1800, because of the common ground they share in agreeing with a grim perspective of childhood history. On the other hand, deMause's work has attracted hostility from historian Hugh Cunningham.[4] It has been argued that he has written a history of child abuse and not of childhood.[5] Also, some critics claim that the sources he used lack the systematic analysis that would give the reader confidence in them as reliable evidence.
WLU (talk) 19:32, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
- OK: I'will try to move that to the Psychohistory article. —Cesar Tort 19:35, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
- Cool. The deMause page still desperately needs expanding with more info about the man. Any chance he's been in any torrid love affairs or international espionage incidents? That could be fun to write about... WLU (talk) 22:30, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
References
- ^ a b deMause, Lloyd (1988). "On Writing Childhood History". The Journal of Psychohistory. 16 (2) Fall.
- ^ Dervin, Dan (2005). "George W. Bush's Second Term: Saving the World, Saving the Country". The Journal of Psychohistory. 33: 117–124.
- ^ deMause, Lloyd (2002). The Emotional Life of Nations. NY/London: Karnak. pp. 104–109.
- ^ Cunningham, Hugh (1995). Children and Childhood in Western Society since 1500. London: Longman. p. 9.
- ^ de Mause, 1974, p. 41
Another view of deMause
[edit]I looked up deMause the other day in Wikipedia, and I was very surprised by the tiny size of the entry. On reading this Discussion page I learned of the controversy over his notability. As an applied mathematician (specializing in the social sciences), psychohistory is way outside my domain of professional expertise, but perhaps I can contribute something useful and quantitative to this discussion anyway.
My exposure to deMause and psychohistory came about in an unusual way: my wife was the copy editor for the Journal of Psychohistory for many years. She would periodically bring articles to my attention, and over the years I have read quite a few. I want to try to bring some perspective to this discussion with two contributions: some facts about psychohistory as a scholarly endeavor, and an independent analysis of the significance of deMause in the history of ideas.
First, some facts about psychohistory as a legitimate domain of inquiry:
- The International Psychohistorical Association, founded in 1977 by Lloyd de Mause, has annual meetings every year for 30 years. I have never attended, but friends tell me that they are well-attended by psychoanalysts, therapists, and authors from around the world.
- The Journal of Psychohistory (founded and edited by deMause) is listed in the 2005 catalog of journals held by 500 or more libraries around the world. Source: http://www.ilstu.edu/~brstoff/ebss/psycjournals305.htm
- The Journal of Psychohistory had an impact factor of 0.47 in 2001. In the list of all social science journals, ranked by impact factor, J.Psychohistory appears on page 17 out of 27 pages. In other words, it ranked higher than 37% of all journals in psychology in impact factor. It was very close to the Journal of Forensic Psychiatry, the Journal of Psychosocial Oncology, and the Journal of Mathematical Sociology. (Impact factor is calculated by dividing the number of current citations to articles published in the two previous years by the total number of articles published in the two previous years, among all journals indexed by the Social Science Citation Index.) Source: http://www.psych.uw.edu.pl/doktoranckie/n2/pliki/impact_factor.pdf
- At Journal-Ranking.com, which uses a more broadly-based index of journal quality, the Journal of Psychohistory ranks #4662 out of all 8000 journals ranked. Within the category of "Psychology - Multidisciplinary", the Journal of Psychohistory ranked #52 out of 106. Source: http://www.journal-ranking.com/ranking/listCommonRanking.html?journalListId=423&citingStartYear=1901&selfCitationWeight=1&pagingPage=1&externalCitationWeight=1&
For all these reasons it would seem that psychohistory — a discipline founded by deMause — has a legitimate claim to space within Wikipedia. Now let me turn to my view on the notability of deMause himself.
It seems to me that deMause has contributed ideas to the social sciences in two distinct areas: (a) the frequency and severity of child abuse in European history, and (b) the fantasy-life of nations. The second of these two areas is distinctly speculative and non-scientific, and I have little use or respect for it. The first, on the other hand, contains original and important scientific hypotheses that someday will be verifiable with empirical data.
Let me draw an analogy between the ideas of deMause and those of Lawrence Keeley, professor of Archeology at the University of Illinois:
- Keeley holds that the frequency of deaths from warfare was greater in the past than it is today, and that it has been decreasing for the past two or three millennia. This directly contradicts the commonly-held opinion, both within anthropology and the public mind, that "primitive" societies were much more peaceful than modern societies (this is the "Myth of the Peaceful Savage"). Keeley's 1996 book, "War Before Civilization" adduced an enormous amount of historical and archeological data in support of his controversial thesis.
- DeMause holds that the frequency and severity of child abuse was greater in the past than it is today, and that it has been decreasing for the past two millenia or so. This directly contradicted the then commonly-held opinion, both within anthropology and the public mind, that neither "primitive" nor modern societies treat their children badly at all. DeMause's breakthrough 1978 monograph, "The Evolution of Childhood", was hugely controversial, despite the enormous amount of scholarly historical references that deMause brought to bear on this question.
In my non-expert opinion as a mere mathematician and statistician, deMause's career has been hampered by two things: his theory emerged 20 years too early for it to have been taken seriously, and he had no education in epidemiology or quantitative social science. He attempted to justify his theory using methods that were standard in psychoanalysis at the time, but which bear little resemblance or connection to real science. Despite his very weak scientific methodology, however, I do believe that his theory deserves respect and testing by others more knowledgeable of how to do the testing, exactly as Keeley's theory has.
Almost all of the "knowledge" that we thought we had back in the 1960s and 70s on contemporary rates of child sexual abuse are now known to be radically understated, for girls and even more for boys. The "Battered Child Syndrome" was only recognized in medicine in 1962, by Dr. C. Henry Kempe. If we were in such ignorance and denial then, only forty years ago, how much more might it have been during the Victorian Era, say, or the Middle Ages?
I think it is important to realize that when deMause first advanced his hypothesis about child abuse in history, he was being hard-nosed in comparison to his contemporaries. The mythology of the day held that child abuse was virtually non-existent, and that the past experiences of children were idyllic. DeMause attacked those ideas with hundreds upon hundreds of written historical documents that indicated otherwise. That effort inspired the early pioneers of the movement to uncover contemporary child abuse, and for that contribution alone deMause is notable. I believe that his historical theory will one day be testable, just as Keeley's parallel theory is now. No matter whether deMause is ultimately found to be right or wrong, his notable contribution was to be the first to raise the question, and thus to inspire others to look into the topic of the effects of child abuse generally.
Here is what Alice Miller, a popular author who has a substantial biography in Wikipedia, recently wrote about deMause (the bold emphasis is mine):
"But working toward a better, more aware future cannot be done in isolation from the ongoing attempt to understand our history in all its facets, for us as individuals and as society. The work started by Lloyd deMause and continued by him and other psychohistorians is to my knowledge the first systematic research in this direction. The history of child-rearing might be more illuminating than many others in illustrating the dangers for society at large attendant on willful ignorance about child development. The ongoing research on babies from birth to three might be helpful for eventually overcoming this ignorance. It may enable some historians to raise more frequently the question raised for the first time by Lloyd deMause: what does it feel like to be an abused infant, without any enlightened witnesses? Unfortunately, the early childhood of people who recently mercilessly killed in Rwanda has not yet become an issue for psychological or sociological investigation. But should empathic psychohistorians once become interested in finding out and describing the atmosphere of the first years of the killer's life, they could probably be able to explain some of the events that still seem inexplicable." — Quoted in: http://www.naturalchild.org/alice_miller/political.html
For all of these reasons, I urge that the deMause biography receive better treatment in Wikipedia, including a discussion of the notability of his creations, the discipline of psychohistory, its journal, its institute, and its 30 years of international conferences — all undertaken in a climate of extreme denial of the realities of child abuse. —Aetheling (talk) 20:15, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
- "I looked up deMause the other day in Wikipedia, and I was very surprised by the tiny size of the entry."
- Dear Aetheling, as you can appreciate in the above discussion, some content has been moved from this article to Psychohistory in order to comply with the Wikipedia policy to avoid Content Forks.
- I agree with you that the page size is tiny. Perhaps you that seem to know deMause much better than me can contribute to expand the page by adding biographical information. DeMause's scholarly work is fully described in the articles Psychohistory and Psychohistorical views on infanticide.
- I look forward to find biographical info of deMause for this article.
Expanding the article
[edit]It seems rather odd that even the basic list of his works was removed during the controversy on NPOV. I've restored that--I assume it must have been accidental.
As for "content fork", it is invariably the case that some indication of the work of a scholar be given at the biographical article of the scholar. The general subject article should not be devoted to any one scholar's view, but should show the diversity of opinion. As I've never though much about him before this week, I'll try to restore a suitably objective discussion. I have formed some impression from the above discussion of what has been going on: first, any discussion of child abuse is going to be very controversial. In a broader sense, there is obviously no agreement between historians generally about the possible benefit of a viewpoint based on psychoanalysis or each of the various schools of psychoanalysis, just as there is no agreement about a viewpoint based on Marxism.
- and I can tell you one thing very clearly as a librarian: the data given above on the Journal of his journal shows it to be a real but not very important journal. an impact factor like that is nothing to boast about. Nor is a rank on other factors merely midway among psychology journals. However, I will take a look at the article in WP on it at some point. DGG (talk) 01:04, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I did not intend to imply that the Journal of Psychohistory is "important", only that it has a following and cannot be dismissed so cavalierly. While you are looking up things, perhaps you could look up the entry for Lloyd deMause in the Social Science Citation Index. How many citations has he been getting recently? I don't have institutional access, so I can't do the research myself. —Aetheling (talk) 04:53, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- I searched the Web of Science (combining the SSCI and SCI; my access covers 1975 till present). 39 publications are listed that have been cited a total of 82 times (the maximum being 15). Excluding self-citations leaves 58 articles that cite him. His h-index is 7. As this is all unbelievably low, I tried searching for different name variants: "Author=(mause dl*) OR Author=(demause L*) OR Author=(de mause l*)", but that didn't change anything. Something must be wrong here, I know postdocs that have more citations than that... Most citations seem to come from the Journal of Psychohistory, which has a 2006 Impact factor of 0.389 (the vast majority of citations being from the journal itself). This ranks it 73 out of 99 journals in its ISI category, "PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY". 709 citations to deMause come up if I search for "cited reference", which still is not really that much but does show that most citations are to his works published in sources that are not covered by the SSCI and SCI. Perhaps someone here has an explanation for the low citation figures that I find for deMause, they seem decidedly unrealistic for someone who more or less founded a field (even one considered as fringe by some). --Crusio (talk) 11:19, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- You searched in the web of science. I am a total newbie about these matters but of course psychohistory, like the humanities, is not a hard science. I guess the journal we are talking about belongs in the category of "Psychology - Multidisciplinary"? Is there a specific search engine to measure these journals' ratings?—Cesar Tort 16:30, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Psychology and humanities in general are certainly considered "science" by me (and I'm a life scientist myself). In any case, WoS includes the SSCI. Sorry that I did not expand that abbreviation: it stands for Social Sciences Citation Index (as well as the Arts & Humanities Citation Index , by the way). For journals' ratings, the most authorative source is the JCR (Journal Citation Reports), from which I took that category heading "Psychology - Multidisciplinary". --Crusio (talk) 16:42, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- You searched in the web of science. I am a total newbie about these matters but of course psychohistory, like the humanities, is not a hard science. I guess the journal we are talking about belongs in the category of "Psychology - Multidisciplinary"? Is there a specific search engine to measure these journals' ratings?—Cesar Tort 16:30, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
Doing justice to Lloyd deMause
[edit]I've just come across this Wikipedia entry, and I'm surprised and disappointed by it. It seems to have been edited in way that is hostile to a great man; presumably, by a behaviourist on a mission. There is no doubt that Lloyd DeMause has made one of the greatest contributions to the development of psychoanalytic thought over the past forty years. His books are fascinating. His chapter 'The Evolution of Childhood' in the book 'The History of Childhood.' (1974: The Psychoanalytic press) is a scholarly but highly readable work. It has had a great influence on Psychoanalysis, and on our understanding of families. I'm amazed that the Wikipedia has such great content on minor computer geeks whose influence is comparatively minor and transient, whereas a man like Lloyd DeMause, whose eminence is widely acknowledged by his peers, and by academia in general, is given such short shrift. Even if you disagree with psychohistory, it is well-worth study. It is as rigorous as any other aspect of the study of history, thanks to Lloyd. I would add, on a more personal note, that his famous analysis of the Nixon Tapes, completely changed my view of World Politics. His conclusions were frightening at the time, but have been borne out by subsequent events.
—Preceding unsigned comment added by AndrewRMClarke (talk • contribs)
- This article should be expanded with info about Lloyd's life. With regard to psychohistory, the article Psychohistory also needs work. I agree with you that we need more balanced articles on this subject. Which specific sentences would you dispute in either of these articles? —Cesar Tort 15:37, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
Is deMause Jewish?
[edit]Recently I have witnessed online discussions that deMause might be of Jewish heritage. But blogs and forums are not reliable sources. Any reliable source that confirms that? 189.249.225.211 (talk) 00:33, 18 February 2014 (UTC)
- Where did you see this discussion? Has he ever commented about being Jewish or not? I've read some of his articles on Jewish history. Can you put a link? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Madgambler (talk • contribs)
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