Richard Nixon: a Psychobiography
- Binding: Hardcover
- Publisher: Columbia University Press
- Publish date: 08/01/1997
The first detailed psychoanalytic portrait of the 37th president, Richard Nixon: A Psychobiography provides fascinating insight not only into his complex psyche but also into the way it influenced his political decisions, whether shrewd or disastrous. The authors explore Nixon's difficult upbringing -- his mean-spirited, abusive father and emotionally distant mother; the tragic deaths of two of his brothers; his rejection by the first woman he hoped to marry; the embarrasingly long pursuit of his eventual wife, Pat; and other shaping episodes and characters.
This book examines moments in Nixon's presidency that have provoked much speculation but few answers, from his attempt to talk to Vietnam war protesters during a late-night visit to the Lincoln Memorial, to his keeping of the White House tapes. Nixon emerges as a man with extraordinary healing abilities, yet one who suffered from inner conflicts that damaged his personality with profound psychological flaws. His desire to heal is shown as an attempt to reconcile inner conflicts between a grandiose self image and an impoverished private sense of worth. Heprojected his own devalued self image onto others, attempting to control and even to destroy them, finally surrendering to paranoid delusions that caused his downfall.
What emerges is a more nuanced, more humanized Nixon than ever before seen, in a book essential to understanding this enigmatic figure in American history.
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