Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism | |
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Book cover, 1989 edition |
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Author(s) | Robert Jay Lifton, M.D. |
Translator | Richard Jaffe (Chinese) |
Cover artist | Shelley Gruendler |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Subject(s) | Psychology Brainwashing Mind control |
Genre(s) | Non-fiction |
Publisher | University of North Carolina Press |
Publication date | July 1989 (reprint) |
Media type | Paperback |
Pages | 524 |
ISBN | 0-8078-4253-2 |
OCLC Number | 19388265 |
Dewey Decimal | 153.8/53/0951 19 |
LC Classification | BF633 .L5 1989 |
Followed by | Death in Life: Survivors of Hiroshima |
Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of "Brainwashing" in China is a psychology non-fiction book on brainwashing and mind control by Robert Jay Lifton. The book was published in multiple editions, in 1956 (hardcover), 1961, 1962 (hardcover), 1963 (paperback), and 1989 (paperback). The 1989 reprint edition was published by University of North Carolina Press. Lifton is a Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York.
Contents |
In the book, Lifton outlines the "Eight Criteria for Thought Reform":
Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism popularized the term "thought-terminating cliché". A thought-terminating cliché is a commonly used phrase, sometimes passing as folk wisdom, used to quell cognitive dissonance. Though the phrase in and of itself may be valid in certain contexts, its application as a means of dismissing dissent or justifying fallacious logic is what makes it thought-terminating.
The language of the totalist environment is characterized by the thought-terminating cliché. The most far-reaching and complex of human problems are compressed into brief, highly reductive, definitive-sounding phrases, easily memorized and easily expressed. These become the start and finish of any ideological analysis.
In George Orwell’s novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, the fictional constructed language Newspeak is designed to reduce language entirely to a set of thought-terminating clichés. Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World society uses thought-terminating clichés in a more conventional manner, most notably in regard to the drug soma as well as modified versions of real-life platitudes, such as, “A doctor a day keeps the jim-jams away.” Hannah Arendt, in Eichmann in Jerusalem, describes Adolf Eichmann as an intelligent man using many of these thought-terminating clichés to justify his actions and the role he played in the Holocaust. For her, these phrases are symptomatic of an absence of thought.