Papers by Richard Koenigsberg
Psychoanalytic Review, 1968
Political Psychology, 1988
Page 1. Political Psychology, Vol. 9, No. 3, 1988 BOOK REVIEW Developmental Time, Cultural Space:... more Page 1. Political Psychology, Vol. 9, No. 3, 1988 BOOK REVIEW Developmental Time, Cultural Space: Studies in Psychogeography. By Howard F. Stein. University of Oklahoma Press (distributed by Harper and Row), Norman and London, 1987, 235 pp., $29.95. ...
Political Psychology, 1988
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Adolf Hitler was responsible for starting a World War that killed over 50 million people. He pres... more Adolf Hitler was responsible for starting a World War that killed over 50 million people. He presided over what was, perhaps, the most heinous crime against humanity of the 20th Century and is characterized by many as the personification of evil.
Ideologies of War, Oct 17, 2005
I have developed a method for uncovering the sources of ideology. I examine ideological statement... more I have developed a method for uncovering the sources of ideology. I examine ideological statements as if manifest content to reveal an ideology's latent meaning. I place emphasis upon specific words, phrases, images and metaphors bound to central terms of an ideology (e.g., in the case of Nazism, terms like "the German people," "the Jew," etc.). Hitler’s Ideology (1975) presents recurring images and metaphors contained within Hitler's writing and speeches in order to reconstruct the central fantasy that was the source of Nazism.

I study ideology as if manifest content of a dream, seeking to comprehend the ideology's latent c... more I study ideology as if manifest content of a dream, seeking to comprehend the ideology's latent content or unconscious meaning. I observe recurring images and metaphors within ideological productions. Through systematic analysis of recurring images and metaphors, it is possible to reveal the deep structure of an ideology.
This paper represents a reconstruction of Hitler's ideology. What I have discovered through analysis of the images and metaphors contained within his writings and speeches is that Hitler's ideology revolves around a fantasy about the body, more precisely, about the German body politic. Actions undertaken or performed by the Nazis represented the unfolding or acting out of this bodily fantasy.
Hitler embraced Germany as an entity that could “live on.” He believed that the German nation had the potential to become immortal. The German body politic, however, Hitler believed, contained a force within working to destroy it, the Jew. The Nazi movement constituted a struggle to come to terms with this force of destruction threatening the life of Germany—by extinguishing it.
Psychoanalytic Review, Jan 1, 1967
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American Imago, Jan 1, 1967
Psychoanalytic Review, Jan 1, 1968
Revolution and Nationalism New York: The Library of …, Jan 1, 1977
The Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy Review, Jan 1, 1995
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Papers by Richard Koenigsberg
This paper represents a reconstruction of Hitler's ideology. What I have discovered through analysis of the images and metaphors contained within his writings and speeches is that Hitler's ideology revolves around a fantasy about the body, more precisely, about the German body politic. Actions undertaken or performed by the Nazis represented the unfolding or acting out of this bodily fantasy.
Hitler embraced Germany as an entity that could “live on.” He believed that the German nation had the potential to become immortal. The German body politic, however, Hitler believed, contained a force within working to destroy it, the Jew. The Nazi movement constituted a struggle to come to terms with this force of destruction threatening the life of Germany—by extinguishing it.
This paper represents a reconstruction of Hitler's ideology. What I have discovered through analysis of the images and metaphors contained within his writings and speeches is that Hitler's ideology revolves around a fantasy about the body, more precisely, about the German body politic. Actions undertaken or performed by the Nazis represented the unfolding or acting out of this bodily fantasy.
Hitler embraced Germany as an entity that could “live on.” He believed that the German nation had the potential to become immortal. The German body politic, however, Hitler believed, contained a force within working to destroy it, the Jew. The Nazi movement constituted a struggle to come to terms with this force of destruction threatening the life of Germany—by extinguishing it.