• Psychoanal Q · Jan 2014

    Some reflections on Ian McEwan's atonement: enactment, guilt, and reparation.

    • Ilany Kogan.
    • Training Analyst of the Israel Psychoanalytic Society.
    • Psychoanal Q. 2014 Jan 1; 83 (1): 49-70.

    AbstractRecognizing that enactments have been discussed in psychoanalysis primarily as occurrences in the treatment setting, the author proposes a new application of the term enactments: that it may pertain to the actions of some individuals in their efforts to cope with bad things that they have done to others. That is, enactment can be a substitute-for-atonement mechanism. The author illustrates this view of enactment through a discussion of Ian McEwan's novel Atonement (2001), and in particular by examining the behavior and motivations of one of its central characters, Briony Tallis. Included are explorations of the relationships between enactment and guilt and between enactment and reparation. © 2014 The Psychoanalytic Quarterly, Inc.

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