Advances in Historical Studies

Volume 3, Issue 5 (December 2014)

ISSN Print: 2327-0438   ISSN Online: 2327-0446

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.33  Citations  

Historical Details on Freud and the Moral Order Foundations of Societies

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DOI: 10.4236/ahs.2014.35021    4,816 Downloads   6,235 Views  

ABSTRACT

Freud considered that, in the beginning, the idea of society resulted from the moral order imposed by a totemic ideal generated by feelings of guilt and remorse motivated by the parricide of the founder of the community. Since the substance of the process has persisted in reinventions of social identities throughout history, from this assumption the article interprets the foundations of the moral order in postcolonial African societies, whose origins date back to pre-colonial African heritage, European colonial legacies and reactive historical phenomena of independence. While Freud’s ideal type focuses on the sense of collective guilt, the authors’ empirical approach highlights the historical relevance of the ideal of victimization in the twentieth century.

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Ribeiro, G. and Bussotti, L. (2014) Historical Details on Freud and the Moral Order Foundations of Societies. Advances in Historical Studies, 3, 258-268. doi: 10.4236/ahs.2014.35021.

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