Dysphoria, vulnerability and identity. An eulogy for anger

Psychopathology. 2000 Jul-Aug;33(4):198-203. doi: 10.1159/000029143.

Abstract

Compared with the bulk of psychiatric literature dedicated to sadness or euphoria, dysphoric states have received relatively little attention. Perhaps we find ourselves facing a removal of anger from the horizon of contemporary psychopathology. Even less attention is given to the 'doublets' of anger. Anger marks off a region of the psyche within which the game of identity is played: as indignation, it defends the limits of that which is tolerable, the border upon which to keep watch, the trench from which to fight. But as fury, in the excess of the absolute affirmation of one's own existence, it incarnates the wreckage and the bloody fall of identity - i.e. pathology. The topic then collects the interweaving of the subjectivising character of rage on the one side, and on the other the explosive one, which breaks up the unifying and conciliatory direction which rationality enforces upon the subject - 'anger of life' and 'anger of death'. Both dimensions are explored with special concern to the reason for empathising with anger.

MeSH terms

  • Death
  • Humans
  • Irritable Mood*
  • Mood Disorders*
  • Rage*
  • Self Concept