I despair reading about the Middle East

It’s hard to keep the “peace on earth” and “goodwill” themes with the backdrop of news from the many battlefields in the Middle East.

Al-Monitor.com manages to provide ground-level, neighborhood views of the wars from several different countries, as does Al-Alarbiya and, of course, Al Jazeera. Juan Cole’s blog, “Informed Comment,” is, as the title suggests, always informative.

From a column this morning in Al-Arabiya, “The Arabs circa 2014: Despair and disintegration.”

Bad times have visited the Arabs before, but 2014 was a year from hell. The region stretching from Beirut to Basra continued to slowly disintegrate, with people clinging more than ever to their primordial identities as if the colonial constructs of the Nation-States that emerged after the First World War were only a passing moment.

The column goes on:

The fragmentation of the region, the unimaginable horrors of Syria and Iraq, the slow descent of Lebanon, Yemen and Libya into greater chaos, add to that Egypt’s continuing slouch towards greater autocracy, and you have the making of a dispirited region. It is impossible now to see how Syria, Iraq and maybe Libya and Yemen can be reconstituted as unitary states.

December was the fourth anniversary of the spark that exploded the season of Arab uprisings. An honest audit would have to show that the harvest of that season, with the exception of Tunisia, would show a worse than meager results.

Down at street level, there’s reporting that doesn’t enter into the American mainstream, like this one, “Scabies, lice ravaging Aleppo neighborhoods.”

From a more mainstream perspective, The Council on Foreign Relations website for regional comment and news, and its blog, “Middle East Matters.”

And I recently came across “Syria Comment,” a blog on Syrian politics, history, and religion by Joshua Landis, director of the Center for Middle East Studies who teaches at the University of Oklahoma.

Please add your suggestions of other good sources of diverse viewpoints on the Middle East.

Here’s hoping we will see hope emerging in the new year.


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12 thoughts on “I despair reading about the Middle East

  1. t

    http://www.madamasr.com/
    a “progressive” blog, for the Middle East …

    Saturday, December 27, 2014
    Writer referred to court for criticizing Islamic sheep slaughter
    By: Mada Masr
    The prosecution referred writer Fatma Naoot to the misdemeanor court on Saturday for religious blasphemy, after she criticized the ritual practice of sheep slaughtering during Eid al-Adha, the state-owned Al-Ahram newspaper reported:

    The first court session is scheduled for January 28.

    The liberal and contentious writer, who voiced her strong opposition to the former ruling regime of the Muslim Brotherhood, and is an adamant supporter of President Adbel Fattah al-Sisi’s military-backed administration, faces serious charges of insulting the Islamic religion.

    During Eid al-Adha, Naoot criticized what she described as, “The worst massacre committed by humans for ten centuries whilst smiling,” on her Facebook page, in a post titled, “Happy Massacre.”

    “Animals are being slaughtered and their blood shed for no reason, except to pay for this horrific nightmare,” Naoot said, referring to Prophet Ibraham’s prophecy, in which he saw himself slaughtering his child Ismail. Muslims celebrate the prophecy as God’s order to slaughter sheep every year and feed them to the poor.

    In a statement, Naoot claimed she is paying the price of “enlightenment,” adding, “It was a random Facebook note, congratulating Muslims on Eid al-Adha and asking them to be good to the animals while slaughtering them, instead of viciously slaughtering them in front of kids.”

    Reply
  2. John Bruce

    And in despair I bowed my head;
    “There is no peace on earth,” I said;
    For hate is strong,
    And mocks the song
    Of peace on earth, good-will to men!” Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

    Reply
  3. compare and decide

    http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/foreigners/2014/12/the_world_is_not_falling_apart_the_trend_lines_reveal_an_increasingly_peaceful.html

    “The world is not falling apart. Never mind the headlines. We’ve never lived in such peaceful times.”

    So says the linguist Steven Pinker, who wrote a book on the long-term historical decline of violence.

    Scroll down to the graph on violence in Mexico. In 2007, there were 10 homicides per 100,000 people. Disturbingly, in just a few years, this homicide rate doubled. But this is a small fraction of the homicide rate in Mexico’s past; in 1940, the rate was almost 70 homicides per 100,000 people. This does not even mention the early 20th century (for example, the Mexican Revolution, from 1910-1920, during which up to 2 million Mexicans died).

    This thesis is probably best articulated in Pinker’s book “The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined”. Here is one reader’s summary from the comments in amazon.com.

    This is a huge book, but as Pinker says, it is a huge subject. He organizes himself by lists. First, there are six significant trends which have led to a decrease in violence.
    1. Our evolution from hunter gatherers into settled civilizations, which he calls the Pacification Process.
    2. The consolidation of small kingdoms and duchies into large kingdoms with centralized authority and commerce, which he calls the Civilizing Process.
    3. The emergence of Enlightenment philosophy, and it’s respect for the individual through what he calls the Humanitarian Revolution.
    4. Since World War II, violence has been suppressed, first by the overwhelming force of the two parties in the Cold War, and more recently by the American hegemony. Pinker calls this the Long Peace.
    5. The general trend, even apart from the Cold War, of wars to be more infrequent, and less violent, however autocratic and anti-democratic the governments may be. Call this the New Peace.
    6. Lastly, the growth of peace and domestic societies, and with it the diminishing level of violence through small things like schoolyard fights, bullying, and picking on gays and minorities. He titles this the Rights Revolution.

    What (little) I’ve read on such matters confirms Pinker’s views. I’ve read that the current homicide rates among men in the tribal areas of Papau New Guinea are 30%; that is, there is a 30% chance that an adult male will die of violence. That’s supposedly the consistent homicide rate in historical hunter-gatherer societies.

    The historical argument is that in older, simpler societies, there is constant, low-level violence. In contrast, in modern industrial societies, there are long periods of peace interrupted by terrible cataclysms of violence. This is because the potential for mass destruction in modern war has a deterrent effect – up until there is a war. But even the highest levels of violence in the modern age are still lower than the steady, cumulative violence of tribal societies. For example, it is estimated that 8 million Russian men died in combat in WW2. But looked at on the scale of the lifespan of the Russian soldiers in question, and taking into account the size of the male Russian population of the period in question, this is still only one-fourth the homicide rate found among men today in tribal Papau New Guinea.

    Reply
  4. compare and decide

    Let me revise those Soviet casualty figures.

    Perhaps 8 million Soviet soldiers were killed in action during WW2. But another 6 million seem to have gone MIA. (That’s an astonishing number of soldiers who simply vanished, probably captured by the Germans and ‘processed’.) In total, perhaps 25 million Soviet citizens perished in the war out of a population of 200 million.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_II_casualties_of_the_Soviet_Union

    The question is how all those Russians died. It could be famine and disease caused by the disruption from the war. But there might be some overlap of persecution of the population by the Soviet government under Stalin. But much of it was Germans systematically exterminating Russians.

    Here is the 1985 Russian movie “Come and See”, about the German occupation of one state of the Soviet Union, Belorussia, in which hundreds of villages were eradicated by the Germans (with much enjoyment, apparently).

    http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xvgqu8_come-and-see-1985-pt-1_creation

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  5. compare and decide

    I’m looking around the Internet to find how many people the Germans murdered in WW2. I keep finding the number 11 million, 6 million of whom were Jews. That bigger number does not get mentioned too often. The overall goal of the war – to conquer Eastern Europe and replace its people with Germans – was also the German goal of WW1 and even earlier, in the 19th century. Actually, I did not know that until I came across the following article:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lebensraum

    More unfamiliar facts: The Japanese murdered 14 million people in WW2, even more than the Germans murdered. Scroll down and look at the photographs. Notice how happy the soldiers are while doing their work.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_war_crimes

    But we can look back in history further for this kind of behavior:

    Deuteronomy 20

    10 When you march up to attack a city, make its people an offer of peace. 11 If they accept and open their gates, all the people in it shall be subject to forced labor and shall work for you. 12 If they refuse to make peace and they engage you in battle, lay siege to that city. 13 When the LORD your God delivers it into your hand, put to the sword all the men in it. 14 As for the women, the children, the livestock and everything else in the city, you may take these as plunder for yourselves. And you may use the plunder the LORD your God gives you from your enemies. 15 This is how you are to treat all the cities that are at a distance from you and do not belong to the nations nearby.

    16 However, in the cities of the nations the LORD your God is giving you as an inheritance, do not leave alive anything that breathes. 17 Completely destroy them—the Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites—as the LORD your God has commanded you. 18 Otherwise, they will teach you to follow all the detestable things they do in worshiping their gods, and you will sin against the LORD your God.

    Conquest is not exactly something new.

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  6. compare and decide

    Regarding the notion that human history has gradually grown less violent, let’s use the Charlie Hebdo shooting as a reference point.

    If you look up “Paris massacre” on Wikipedia, you will be directed instead to the events of 1961.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_massacre_of_1961

    The Paris massacre of 1961 was a massacre in Paris on 17 October 1961, during the Algerian War (1954–62). Under orders from the head of the Parisian police, Maurice Papon, the French police attacked a forbidden demonstration of some 30,000 pro-FLN Algerians. Two months before, FLN had decided to increase the bombing in France and to resume the campaign against the pro-France Algerians and the rival Algerian nationalist organization called MNA in France. After 37 years of denial, in 1998 the French government acknowledged 40 deaths, although there are estimates of over 200.

    The massacre seems to have been premeditated by the infamous police official Maurice Papon, who had been an official in France under German occupation.

    The 17 October 1961 massacre appears to have been intentional, as has been demonstrated by historian Jean-Luc Einaudi, who won a trial against Maurice Papon in 1999 — the latter was convicted in 1998 on charges of crimes against humanity for his role under the Vichy collaborationist regime during World War II. Official documentation and eyewitnesses within the Paris police department indeed suggest that the massacre was directed by Maurice Papon. Police records show that Papon called for officers in one station to be ‘subversive’ in quelling the demonstrations, and assured them protection from prosecution if they participated.[2] Many demonstrators died when they were violently herded by police into the River Seine, with some thrown from bridges after being beaten unconscious. Other demonstrators were killed within the courtyard of the Paris police headquarters after being arrested and delivered there in police buses. Officers who participated in the courtyard killings took the precaution of removing identification numbers from their uniforms, while senior officers ignored pleas by other policemen who were shocked when witnessing the brutality. Silence about the events within the police headquarters was further enforced by threats of reprisals from participating officers.

    The French had conquered Algeria in the 1830s, and it had administratively fully become a part of France.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algerian_War

    Conquest of Algeria

    On the pretext of a slight to their consul, the French invaded Algiers in 1830.[8] Directed by Marshall Bugeaud, who became the first Governor-General of Algeria, the conquest was violent, marked by a “scorched earth” policy designed to reduce the power of the Dey; this included massacres, mass rapes, and other atrocities.[9]

    In 1834, Algeria became a French military colony and, in 1848, was declared by the constitution of 1848 to be an integral part of France and divided into three French departments (Algiers, Oran and Constantine). After Algeria was divided into departments, many French and other Europeans (Spanish, Italians, Maltese, and others) settled in Algeria.

    After World War II, equality of rights was proclaimed by the Ordonnance of March 7, 1944, and later confirmed by the Loi Lamine Guèye of May 7, 1946, which granted French citizenship to all the subjects of France’s territories and overseas departments, and by the 1946 Constitution. The Law of September 20, 1947, granted French citizenship to all Algerian subjects, who were not required to renounce their Muslim personal status.[12]

    Algeria was unique to France because, unlike all other overseas possessions acquired by France during the 19th century, only Algeria was considered and legally classified an integral part of France.

    Almost 175,000 people died during the Algerian War.

    Subsequently, there was a civil war in Algeria from 1991 to 2002 between Islamist rebels and a secularist military, during which 44,000 to 150,000 people were killed.

    Drawing a line from the number of casualties from the French conquest of Algeria in 1830, to its war of independence in the 1950s, then to its civil war in the 1990s, and finally to the recent Charlie Hebdo shooting, one traces a starkly declining arc in the number of lives lost from one event to the other.

    One also finds a very short historical memory among Westerners, especially the French.

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  7. compare and decide

    Speaking of Algeria….

    In the West, we talk about the ‘Arab Spring’ that began in 2010. Wiki:

    The Arab Spring is a revolutionary wave of demonstrations and protests (both non-violent and violent), riots, and civil wars in the Arab world that began on 18 December 2010 and spread throughout the countries of the Arab League and surroundings. While the wave of initial revolutions and protests had expired by mid-2012, some refer to the ongoing large-scale conflicts in Middle East and North Africa as a continuation of the Arab Spring, while others refer to aftermath of revolutions and civil wars post mid-2012 as the Arab Winter.

    Some observers have drawn comparisons between the Arab Spring movements and the Revolutions of 1989 (also known as the “Autumn of Nations”) that swept through Eastern Europe and the Second World, in terms of their scale and significance.[33][34][35] Others, however, have pointed out that there are several key differences between the movements, such as the desired outcomes and the organizational role of Internet-based technologies in the Arab revolutions.

    Etymology
    The term “Arab Spring” is an allusion to the Revolutions of 1848, which is sometimes referred to as the “Springtime of Nations”, and the Prague Spring in 1968. In the aftermath of the Iraq War it was used by various commentators and bloggers who anticipated a major Arab movement towards democratization.[39] The first specific use of the term Arab Spring as used to denote these events may have started with the American political journal Foreign Policy.[40] Marc Lynch, referring to his article in Foreign Policy,[41] writes “Arab Spring—a term I may have unintentionally coined in a January 6, 2011 article”.[42] Joseph Massad on Al Jazeera said the term was “part of a US strategy of controlling [the movement’s] aims and goals” and directing it towards American-style liberal democracy.[40] Due to the electoral success of Islamist parties following the protests in many Arab countries, the events have also come to be known as “Islamist Spring” or “Islamist Winter”.

    That’s interesting how Americans imagine that people in these countries are rebelling because “Deep down they want to be just like us!”; later, Americans feel betrayed when these societies spurn American-style values and institutions as universal ideals (same thing happened with American attitudes toward China after the Tiananmen Square massacre). It’s also interesting how Arabs and Muslims see these American hopes and understandings of Arab uprisings as part of a Western conspiracy to turn these rebellions away from their Islamic roots; it shows a real paranoia and, perhaps, a lack of confidence and vitality.

    It’s been noted that Arab monarchies remained in power, whereas Arab presidents were overthrown. This is supposedly because people have lower expectations in a monarchy (the country is the king’s personal property), and because they feel a kind of personal bond with a ruler and his family who have been there for generations.

    One thing that has not been getting much attention is that North Africa, where so many of the revolutions took place, is not really Arab. Historically, North Africa is Berber, not Arab. A sample from the wiki on ‘the Muslim conquest of the Maghreb’:

    This was followed by a Berber rebellion against the new Arab overlords. Gibbon writes:

    Under the standard of their queen Cahina, the independent tribes acquired some degree of union and discipline; and as the Moors respected in their females the character of a prophetess, they attacked the invaders with an enthusiasm similar to their own. The veteran bands of Hassan were inadequate to the defence of Africa: the conquests of an age were lost in a single day; and the Arabian chief, overwhelmed by the torrent, retired to the confines of Egypt.

    Five years passed before Hassan received fresh troops from the caliph. Meanwhile the people of North Africa’s cities chafed under a Berber reign of destruction. Thus Hassan was welcomed upon his return. Gibbon writes that “the friends of civil society conspired against the savages of the land [the Berber tribesmen]; and the royal prophetess was slain in the first battle.”

    By 698, the Arabs had conquered most of North Africa from the Byzantines [Christian allies of the Berber tribesmen]. The area was divided into three provinces: Egypt with its governor at al-Fustat, Ifriqiya with its governor at Kairouan, and the Maghreb (modern Morocco) with its governor at Tangiers.

    Musa bin Nusair, a successful Yemeni general in the campaign, was made governor of Ifriqiya and given the responsibility of putting down a renewed Berber rebellion and converting the population to Islam. Musa and his two sons prevailed over the rebels and enslaved 300,000 captives. The caliph’s portion was 60,000 of the captives. These the caliph sold into slavery, the proceeds from their sale going into the public treasury. Another 30,000 captives were pressed into military service.

    Musa also had to deal with constant harassment from the Byzantine navy. So he built a navy of his own which went on to conquer the Christian islands of Ibiza, Majorca, and Minorca. Advancing into the Maghreb, his forces took Algiers in 700.

    Hence the rise of Berberism. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berberism#Algeria

    Berberism (Berber: Timmuz?a or Tamazi?i?ri) or Amazighism[1] is a Berber political-cultural movement of ethnic, geographic, or cultural nationalism, started mainly in Kabylia, Algeria, and in Morocco and later spread to the rest of Berber countries in North Africa. A Berber group, the Tuaregs, are in rebellion against the West African country of Mali as of 2012, and have established a temporarily de facto independent state called Azawad and identifies itself as “Berber”.

    The Berberist movement in Algeria and Morocco is in opposition to Islamism and cultural Arabization and the pan-Arabist political ideology. In Azawad (northern Mali), the Tuareg-Berberist movement is also secularist and is in opposition to perceived discrimination against Tuareg-Berbers on the part of Black African majority groups.

    Things are never as they seem.

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  8. compare and decide

    I wrote that North Africa is Berber, not Arab.

    That is not quite true of Egypt. Egypt is historically neither Arab nor Berber. This lady will tell you all about it.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rt6Rdnffpo

    The Egyptians had their own language, ‘Coptic’, before it was swamped by Arabic. It still is spoken today ritually within the Christian community of Egypt (much like Hebrew was among Jews in Europe).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?x-yt-cl=84503534&v=aoGLK1ckRXo&x-yt-ts=1421914688

    It turns out that Arabs and Muslims are among the great empire builders. They don’t talk about that, however.

    Reply
  9. compare and decide

    On the subject of national amnesia over Japanese war crimes, here is the textbook case (pun intended). Japanese history schoolbooks have long been accused of glossing over the events of WW2.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_history_textbook_controversies

    Reflecting Japanese tendency towards self-favoring historical revisionism, historian Stephen E. Ambrose noted that “The Japanese presentation of the war to its children runs something like this: ‘One day, for no reason we ever understood, the Americans started dropping atomic bombs on us.'”

    On the other hand, those who live in glass houses should not throw stones.

    North and South Korea, as well as China, which happen to be the most outspoken critics of the Japanese textbook approval process, do not allow private publishing companies to write history textbooks for their schools. Instead, the governments of those countries write a single history textbook for all of their schools. Critics of Chinese and Korean textbooks also argue that the textbooks of those countries are far more politically censored and self-favoring than Japanese textbooks.

    If a national culture represses its collective memory, perhaps the issue emerges in an unconscious form in popular entertainment. The 1999 classic Japanese psychological horror movie “Audition” is considered by many to be perhaps the scariest movie ever made. (It ranked 11 on Time Out’s list of best horror films.) What is fascinating is the way the film subtly moves between genres, and is only partly a ‘horror movie’. In fact, the two halves of the movie are really two different movies (in the first half, things are nice on the outside…). It does mirror the Japanese denial of Japanese war crimes.

    http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x13y9gh_audition-1999-pt-1_creation

    The 1997 Japanese thriller “Cure” is practically a study of war crimes committed by ordinary people, involving hypnotism and amnesia. (Interestingly, the wiki states that “In 2012, South Korean film director Bong Joon-ho listed the film as one of the greatest films of all time.”)

    http://www.veoh.com/watch/v20989506QXmmKMyb?h1=Cure+%281997%29+*+aKa+Kyua

    I vaguely remember seeing a documentary on the psychology of mass movements. In particular, it was explained how a human group will tend to idealize itself in proportion to group cohesion and its stringent demands. The stricter the group, the more it takes itself seriously. This is expressed in the reverence of a figurehead (who is actually a very ordinary person) on whom love is projected. At the same time, the flaws and failings of the group are denied and repressed, and are psychologically projected onto people outside the group. That is, outsiders are scapegoated and demonized. There are two BBC documentaries in which this might have been explained:

    “The Nazis: A Warning from History”

    http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xq1ym0_the-nazis-a-warning-from-history-1-helped-into-power_lifestyle

    “Century of the Self”

    http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/the-century-of-the-self/

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  10. compare and decide

    Here is an interesting map of the Ottoman Empire’s reach into Europe centuries ago:

    http://f.tqn.com/y/asianhistory/1/S/9/J/-/-/OttomanMap1700.jpg

    Greece, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, Ukraine, Moldova, Slovakia, Croatia and Serbia were all under the rule of the Muslim Turks.

    While the West was colonizing the world, Muslims were colonizing the West.

    This is partly a story of technology. The Turks had an army with canon that rivaled the firepower of western armies, but they lacked the kind of ships that European nations had that could mount this heavy canon.

    It is also a story about human nature. It seems that when people or nations have the same type of technology, their behavior is not so different from one another. Although the West might have considered itself manifestly superior to other civilizations by dint of the relative ease of acquiring colonies, the Turks disprove this general feeling of supremacy. Conversely, Muslims cannot be so self-righteous about how they were later colonized by the West.

    And so this is also the story of selective amnesia. There is very little talk today about how Islam once colonized the West through military conquest.

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  11. compare and decide

    Here’s another nifty map of Moslem Europe.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protestantism_and_Islam#Early_religious_accommodation_.2815th.E2.80.9317th_centuries.29

    While Moslems were colonizing southeastern Europe, the rest of Europe was locked in religious warfare between Catholic and Protestant.

    Moreover, Protestants were allied with the Moslems (at least initially). This is partly motivated by ‘ideology’ (to use the term broadly). Both Protestants and Muslims are opposed to idolatry, in which the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox faiths were perceived to indulge. But it is also motivated by strategic realism. “My enemy’s enemy is my friend.” If it had been Protestants who were on the borders of an Islamic empire, the Catholics might have been allied with the Moslems.

    Also, the Moslems were quite tolerant, and did not force Christians to convert to Islam. Again, this is partly ideological. Moslems are required by their faith to tolerate their fellow monotheists of the Book, Christians and Jews. But it was also practical and economic, since Moslems in the Ottoman Empire were taxed at a much, much lower rate than Christians and Jews were, so that conversion to Islam would have undermined the Empire’s finances.

    Yet another fascinating map:

    https://bufordworld.wikispaces.com/file/view/BYZANTINE%20MAP.jpg/485046374/800×591/BYZANTINE%20MAP.jpg

    It is the Christian (Eastern Orthodox) Byzantine Empire at different stages of its history.

    It’s remarkably similar to the later (Moslem) Ottoman Empire.

    Just how did this Christian part of the world become Moslem? It’s not just due to the superior military might of the Turks. The Roman Catholic and the Eastern Orthodox faiths (IIRC) just did not like each other, and so cooperation between them eventually broke down. And so Islam spread. The same seems to have been true of Catholics and Protestants. People who are most similar often exaggerate their differences. This is not, strictly speaking, rational.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narcissism_of_small_differences

    Narcissism of small differences

    The narcissism of small differences (der Narzißmus der kleinen Differenzen) is “the phenomenon that it is precisely communities with adjoining territories, and related to each other in other ways as well, who are engaged in constant feuds and ridiculing each other” – “such sensitiveness […] to just these details of differentiation”.

    The term was coined by Sigmund Freud in 1917, based on the earlier work of British anthropologist Ernest Crawley: “Crawley, in language which differs only slightly from the current terminology of psychoanalysis, declares that each individual is separated from others by a ‘taboo of personal isolation’…this ‘narcissism of minor differences'”.

    The term appeared in Civilization and Its Discontents (1929–1930) in relation to the application of the inborn aggression in man to ethnic (and other) conflicts, a process still considered by Freud, at that point, as “a convenient and relatively harmless satisfaction of the inclination to aggression”.

    For Lacanians, the concept clearly related to the sphere of the Imaginary: “the narcissism of small differences, which situates envy as the decisive element…in issues that involve narcissistic image”.

    Glen O. Gabbard suggested Freud’s “Narcissism of Small Difference” provides a framework within which to understand that, in a love relationship, there can be a need to find, and even exaggerate, differences in order to preserve a feeling of separateness and self.

    In terms of postmodernity, consumer culture has been seen as predicated on “the ‘narcissism of small differences’…to achieve a superficial sense of one’s own uniqueness, an ersatz sense of otherness which is only a mask for an underlying uniformity and sameness”.

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