Cocks, G. (1991). Bringing the Holocaust Home: The Freudian Dynamics of Kubrick's The Shining&... Psychoanal. Rev., 78:103-125.

Welcome to PEP Web!

Viewing the full text of this document requires a subscription to PEP Web.

If you are coming in from a university from a registered IP address or secure referral page you should not need to log in. Contact your university librarian in the event of problems.

If you have a personal subscription on your own account or through a Society or Institute please put your username and password in the box below. Any difficulties should be reported to your group administrator.

Username:
Password:

Can't remember your username and/or password? If you have forgotten your username and/or password please click here and log in to the PaDS database. Once there you need to fill in your email address (this must be the email address that PEP has on record for you) and click "Send." Your username and password will be sent to this email address within a few minutes. If this does not work for you please contact your group organizer.

Athens user? Login here.

Not already a subscriber? Order a subscription today.

(1991). Psychoanalytic Review, 78:103-125

Bringing the Holocaust Home: The Freudian Dynamics of Kubrick's The Shining

Geoffrey Cocks Author Information

World War II has relatively recently begun to take on a dark mythopoeic aspect for the artists of the postmodern age. Unlike World War I, whose horrors preoccupied European society and art right from the armistice of 1918, for a generation afterward the second “Great War” of the twentieth century was generally celebrated as a “good war” by the victorious Allied nations. The former Axis powers converted to the ideologies of their conquerors and, with them, concentrated on economic recovery, the rigors and responsibilities of the Cold War, and the repression of the horrors of the previous conflict. These preoccupations were challenged beginning in the sixties. The Holocaust was rediscovered as a subject for historians, artists, writers, and filmmakers who also integrated it into critical concerns about the nature of human society and its future on earth. Even Alain Resnais's classic 1955 short film on the Nazi concentration camps, Night and Fog, had

[This is a summary or excerpt from the full text of the book or article. The full text of the document is available to subscribers.]

Copyright © 2009, Psychoanalytic Electronic Publishing. Help | About | Report a Problem

WARNING! This text is printed for the personal use of the subscriber to PEP Web and is copyright to the Journal in which it originally appeared. It is illegal to copy, distribute or circulate it in any form whatsoever.