But fear of a stern father appears to have
combined
with this to "stampede" Adrian into complete homosexual submission to the father and adoption of the mother's manipulative techniques.
Adorno-T-Authoritarian-Personality-Harper-Bros-1950
He is unable to make his "idealization" of his aunt meaningful by any details; she was "just a good woman," "good to me.
" He "never did" confide in her.
Wilbur's monosyllabic answers to the examiner's inquiry indicate that his childhood was dominated by the harsh rule of his uncle, whose regime he was ap- parently too submissive to think of questioning.
He says that his uncle whipped him several times a month: (Did you ever question whether he was right about it?
) "No.
" The uncle, he declares, "treated me okay," but from a very early age "made me work pretty hard.
(Q.
) Sun-up to sun-down.
(Q.
How did you take that?
) We did what the elders told us to.
(Q.
Did you ever question that?
) Well, I never questioned.
" Wilbur was able to rebel only when he could create a persecutory rationale by 'feeling singled out: "Only one disagreement-he wanted me to do more work than his own children.
" Wilbur reacted to this rationale with explosive defiance-still submissively unable to criticize his uncle's authoritarianism as such-by abruptly leaving home at the age of r5.
With all this, Wilbur in another context describes
? CRIMINALITY AND ANTIDEMOCRA TIC TRENDS
8]9
his uncle as "pretty easy to get along with. " Then, in almost the next breath he n~veals that "he would stay away at night and drink, sometimes come home drunk. My aunt went off in a comer. " Wilbur indicates that he didn't dare to think seriously of criticizing the uncle or of protecting the aunt: (What was your reaction? ) "Didn't think much about it. "
Clarence, too, describes his (real) father as "easy to get along with. " What he admired most about the father was "the way he treated me. (Q. ) Never did abuse me or scold me. " Later, Clarence betrays the reason for his freedom from physical discipline, namely, his own cowed submission to stem parental authority. Although the father would "tell us what we should do, what he wanted us to do, and what he expected us to do," "there wasn't much (disci- pline) to exercise," simply because "we just did what they said. " A moment later, Clarence unwittingly reveals the parental intimidation that forced such utter submission from him: bemoaning the independence of children today, he declares that if he had ever answered his parents back the way he thinks children do now, "I wouldn't be able to sit down! " Clarence has justified his parents' intimidation of him by adopting the same general philosophy of authoritarianism: "Children didn't run wild in those days like they do nowadays. . . . If they have to whip them, I believe in whipping them. I don't believe in sparing the rod and spoiling the child. " This submissive acceptance of parental authoritarianism helps to explain Clarence's inability to evaluate his father objectively: he "didn't know (my father) had any weaknesses. " His description of his mother is equally superficial and moralistic: ''She was a nice, easy-going woman-good mother. " What he admired most about her, he states, was the "way she handled me-always tell me how good I was. " Clarence's distant, stereotyped attitude to his mother is further suggested by his purely physical conception of the way in which "I take after my mother more than my father. (Q. In what ways? ) Well, in my complexion.
(Q. What about personality traits? ) That I couldn't answer. "
After Eugene's father "ran away when I was 2 years old," his mother went to work as a waitress and "took care of me all my life. " Thus she was both mother and father to Eugene. His remarks about her suggest the fear which forms the basis of his "idealizing" her-namely a desperate dependence on her to "do things" for him: (Note the similarity in phrasing with Eugene's submissive-dependent "idealization" of Roosevelt, who "did things" for Eugene via the C. C. C. ). "She's good. In fact, the best. In other words, she's just tops with me. . . . Does everything for me she can. Writes me all the time. (Q. What do you admire most about her? ) Just about everything. (Q. ) Well, I guess her being so good and friendly to everybody, especially me. (Q. What's an example? ) Well, always trying to do everything for me. Very seldom go uptown without bringing something back for me. (Q. What else? ) When Father went away, Mother took care of me all her life, where she could have put me in a home some place. She always stayed with me in
? 88o THE AUTHORIT ARIAN PERSONALITY
trouble. " This dependence, this fear of loss of support, may have been a powerful force driving Eugene to submit to his mother's righteous re. Pres- sion. She is described as having taught him not values but absolutistic moral rules: "She always taught me the difference between right and wrong, the things I should do and shouldn't. " Her moralism, as he describes it, smoth- ered any chance of answering the implicit hostility behind it, because the hos- tility was veiled by a fog of self-righteousness: She would characteristically "just bawl us out" in a way that "made it seem like it was hurting her more than it did us. " "She'd look hurt," with the result that "it just hurt. I never sassed her back or said a mean t'hing. " The implied struggle to hold a desire to "sass her back" is illustrated further in a striking contradiction. The only thing Eugene can imagine that might have prevented his long record of "get- ting in trouble" is more strict moral repression by his mother: "To tell the truth, I don't think she was strict enough with us. " As evidence for this, he mentioned that he sometimes "came home later than I was supposed to. " A minute later, unaware of the contradiction, he declares: "She was pretty strict about that being home on time! " Eugene submitted to his mother's moralism by being "pretty good, up to the time I was r7 years old. " His subsequent "trouble"-gambling, drinking, fighting, and sexual promis- cuity-suggests a belated reaction against this submission. Meanwhile, the hostility which her "hurt" moralism made him suppress causes him to feel guilty and therefore obligated to "do things" for her. Asked what his main satisfactions were in the relationship with his mother, this guilt evokes the inappropriate response that "I guess I haven't made her very happy, but when I'm out there and going straight, I'll always take care of my mother. . . . I feel I've never treated her like I really should. "
2. FASCISTS
The 3 fascist men show, in more extreme form, essentially the same pat- tern of attitudes to parent figures as do the other prejudiced men. Es- pecially notable is their fearful submission to the father, in which homosexual aspects are hardly even disguised.
Buck verbalizes fairly directly his fear of sexuality in relation to his mother: "I'd kinda feel embarrassed if my mother ever brought up a subject like (sex). " His conception of her seems to be exclusively that of an agent to "do things" to gratify his dependence: "She was a hard-workin' lady, took care of us kids. " In fact, when asked what were his main satisfactions in his relationships with his parents, his response is limited to the purely external fact that "they gave me most anything I wanted. " As for his parents' per- sonalities, Buck's orientation toward the external leads him to ask: "You mean the people they associated with? " He cannot go beyond the most super- ficial references to their external roles, such as giving things to himself, being "hard-working" or a "businessman," "got drunk," "gave orders," etc.
? CRIMINALITY AND ANTIDEMOCRA TIC TRENDS 88r
This inhibitory block against any personal relation to them is consistent with the absolute submission which his father forced upon him. Buck "never did see any weaknesses in him. " His blind acceptance of his father's "rightness" about everything explains why: His father, he protests repeatedly;was "gen- erally right when he says something," "always trying to show us the right view of things," "always right in the things he said. " Buck "always figured I had it comin'" when he was "licked," and in his fright "knew right from wrong right away" as an absolute distinction never to be questioned. Hence his father usually needed only to "give us one look and we'd know what he meant. " Buck's fear leads him to say that his parents "never argued . . . even when he (the father) got drunk. " A moment later he naively reveals the reason for the lack of arguments, with no apparent awareness of the contradiction: "Mother didn't say anything. " "If they did" have any disagreements, "they never did let us kids know. " This denial is followed a few sentences later by a description of how sometimes "Dad would go into a rage and walk away . . . and Mother would go into a room and cry; but she'd get over it right away. " Of particular interest, in connection with Buck's fantasy that "most all of them Jews talk about sex mostly . . . about they're gonna (have fellatio per- formed on them) tonight," are some remarks about the ways in which his father (symbolized by Jews? ) used to "talk about sex. " The only sex in- struction Buck had, he declares, consisted in his father's frequent warnings to "watch out for these ch__" in order not to be exploited. In another context he relates how his father began, during his middle 'teens, to give him money for the express purpose of visiting prostitutes. Whether truth or fantasy, this is highly suggestive. It is not difficult to imagine that Buck may have been sexually overstimulated, rather crudely, by his father.
After Floyd's parents separated in his infancy, he rarely saw either of them. Until he was 7 he was raised by a foster mother who boarded children. From age 7 to 14 he lived with his father and a newly acquired stepmother, until he was sent away to boarding school. Floyd describes himself as grossly neglected by the foster mother: "Those people always had something to do from dawn to dusk, and as a kid I never had anything to say. " He "didn't get along too well" with the other children. Discipline was "more corporeal than anything else . . . for any infraction of her so-called rules. " The stepmother he scornfully resented as "just another woman, I guess," "just somebody that was there," and as "mean" and rejective toward himself as "that other woman's child. " He jealously contrasts her with his father as different "in every way. She wasn't his equal in anything-intellectually. " This phrasing raises a sus- picion that Floyd wanted to replace his stepmother and adopt the same "lieu- tenant" role toward his father as he seems to have adopted toward his crime partner. Indirect evidence for this hypothesis is to be found in his "mixed-up loyalty" to his real mother, suggesting definite identification with her feminine role: "I wish she had a husband, and that's the pitiful part of it-a woman
? 882 THE AUTHORIT ARIAN PERSONALITY
shouldn't be alone. " There is much further evidence of Floyd's intense, if am- bivalent homosexual father fixation. He describes his father as a "very, very fine man, intelligent, understanding. Excellent father . . . in every way . . . a man everybody in the community looked up to. " As to what he admires most about his father, he "couldn't singularize on that. Just all of him. " The one shortcoming which he can think of in his father is aggressive abruptness in criticizing: "Well, he was outspoken. . . . If he thought you were no good or doing something wrong, he didn't hesitate to tell you. " But Floyd's fear of his father compels him to justify even this: "That's as much of an asset in ways. " In fact, Floyd cannot mobilize sufficient aggression toward his father to make a single criticism of him, not even of the father's virtual abandon-? ment of him during the first seven years of his life: "Just always been away, that's all. " He denies that his father ever punished him unjustly. A significant reason for Floyd's anxious splitting-off from conscious awareness of all negative feelings toward his father may be similar to the preoccupation of Eugene toward his mother-fear of complete abandonment. This is suggested by Floyd's description of the quarrels between his father and stepmother. These were "very sharp, and their remarks were lasting and bitter, like, 'We never should have taken him home. ' And Father would be confused. . . . Then he would punish me, once very hard; then he would talk to me until I went to sleep. " This dependence, as well as further signs of homosexual at- tachment, would seem to be expressed in the following remarks: "There's only one help I've got, and that's my father"; although "he's never been close to me," he "has stood by me. . . . This affair has brought us closer to- gether than before"; and "he has written me a beautiful letter. "
Adrian's case reveals in rather pure form the dynamics of a power-ridden type of inverted Oedipus complex: fear-driven homosexual submission to a hated father, and underlying identification with the mother's role as sub- ordinate. His mother, who died in her early twenties when he was only 5, seems to have been a very infantile person with "no sense of humor. " She neglected Adrian entirely except for flaunting her sexuality in his face, and then terrifying him by her "way of punishing me. " She was "a very beautiful woman," "very vivacious," "came out in---society . . . spent most of her life going out to dinners. . . . She mostly ignored me, but she always came to show me how she looked before she went out. . . . Except that my nurse said
I was this or that, she didn't seem to know personally what I was about. " Her punishments, "usually for something petty" such as "stealing fudge off a shelf," were capricious and deeply traumatic: "She locked me in dark closets -scared me to death," or "threatened to give me to a neighborhood woman whom she said was a witch. " Yet the fearful dependence of a little child apparently forced Adrian to repress the hate such treatment must have ex- cited: for in the same breath in which he reveals her self-centered cruelty, he idealizes her and is unable to criticize her for these things. (How did
? CRIMINALITY AND ANTIDEMOCRA TIC TRENDS
you feel toward your mother when she punished you? ) "I loved my mother. I was very crazy about my mother. (Did your mother ever punish you un- justly? ) No. She lost her temper unjustly. She was very vacillating-up one minute and down the next; never knew what she was going to do next. Peo- ple just had to stay out of her way when she was that way. " Questioned about her weaknesses or faults, Adrian declares: "In my memory, she just doesn't have any faults. " His mother's intimidation alone might be thought to have discouraged Adrian's heterosexual development.
But fear of a stern father appears to have combined with this to "stampede" Adrian into complete homosexual submission to the father and adoption of the mother's manipulative techniques. The father, who died several years ago, was a military officer who was "not the least bit demonstrative. . . . He dis- approved of any show of emotion of any kind. " Adrian was awed by "his consistency. " "He was a stickler for rules. . . . I thought of him as a sort of tyrant. " Yet, though he seemed "hard as nails with everyone else," he was "very easy with me," because "if my father punished me, (my mother) was so upset that it didn't go. " Adrian describes specific episodes that would seem to have encouraged a fearful "feminine" attitude toward the father: "In- cidentally, whenever she cried, I cried, too. . . . She ofteri threw tantrums, and father just put on his hat and went out, which only made her all the madder.
And I would always cry with her. . . . I always felt when he scolded her, he was scolding me. " Adrian indicates that from earliest infancy he adopted his mother's techniques for manipulating the father: "I hollered . . . usually got my way. In fact, all I ever had to do was cry about anything, and he'd do whatever it was that upset me. " "And remember," says Adrian in explaining his father's coddling him as the father coddled Adrian's mother, "that I look like my mother. " Note the continuing father fixation: "I missed him very much when I was at the boarding house. . . . When I was sick, I used to . . . daydream about his coming to see me. . . . I've saved all my letters to him. . . . He very dramatically returned all my letters, like to an old love. I loved my father very much. " Quite unable to assert any genuine inner independ- ence, Adrian's furtive resentment broke through his weak superego in the form of delinquent rebelliousness: "I became such a worry to him . . . left school when I pleased. I overdrew my charge accounts, and he was ill. " This was followed by an endless succession of delinquencies as an adult. "When he died,'' however, "and when I realized I could never see him again," Adrian began to feel intense shame over his delinquencies and to feel even more deeply submissive to his father: "I put him on a pedestal now he wasn't on for me as a child. . . . He haunts me: I'm always wondering if he would approve of this or approve of that. . . . His judgment was always right. . . . And when I hear opinions expressed, I wonder if they would be his opinion. " Adrian has even made a belated stab at catching up with father-masculinity identi- fications. Before his short-lived parole, he asserted that he was through with
? THE AUTHORITARIAN PERSONALITY
his "repulsive" homosexuality, and that although he would have been "happier as a woman," he had "more determination than I am given credit for" and "can live a man's life, since this is a man's world. " & we have seen before, his "determination" lasted for only about two weeks.
3. LOW SCORERS
In contrast with the high scorers' submission, the low-scoring inter- viewees exhibit more underlying independence toward parents, especially toward the father. This includes some capacity for objective evaluation of parents, as well as sonie ability to resist parental authority on the basis of principle. In each case the preferred parent is definitely the mother, who is loved and respected as an individual. At the same time, each of these men reveals a deep ambivalence toward the mother, which is (almost consciously) inhibited, but not denied by masks of overidealization and reverence. The ambivalence appears to center around frustrated love-dependency longings. It is this primary love-orientation, however, which forms the basis of genuine liking for people and for democratic identifications. And to the extent that these men carry out identifications with underdogs and show resistance to status quo injustice, a basis was formed in early assertions of independence as underdogs in relation to parental authority. Their failure to carry out such identification fully may be due to inhibitions against asserting full in- dependence from parents.
By his "autopsychoanalysis," Art has made partly conscious his "Oedipus complex"; or, as he says he prefers to call it (denying specifically sexual feel- ings toward his mother)-his "dependency complex," later displaced onto mother substitutes. After the death of the father when Art was 9, several factors combined to intensify this complex. His sister and (paternal) half- brother went to stay with relatives. This left Art alone "at home with Mother, who had an advertising job. " Their relationship, he indicates, was quite close, but with himself in a dependent role (though with reciprocating nurturance) toward his mother-provider: "I stayed at home and cooked the meals and did the housework. " She apparently overstimulated his sexual fan- tasies, in a way that made it harder for him to overcome the mother fixation, by glorifying his body as a "precious possession. " And when he was "about 14" she presented to him "the business of childbirth and conception . . . in a very cold-blooded way" (note the almost-conscious ambivalence toward the mother) including an arrangement for him to watch several childbirth operations surreptitiously. Withal, Art's image of her stresses inner, psy- chological values: "An intellectual and a very well-educated person. Her principal gift seems to be that of perception. And a musician-pianist- . . . not by trade but certainly by nature. " Her frailties include "a psychological disturbance as great as mine. Fortunately didn't cause her as much trouble, but certainly caused her as much anguish. " The mother's emotional support
? CRIMINALITY AND ANTIDEMOCRA TIC TRENDS ss5
seemed to help Art assert considerable independence of his father: e. g. , ex- plicitly rejecting the latter's anti-Semitism; evaluating him with some critical- ness as "spoiled" by his "rich parents" as "an only child"; criticizing his disci- pline as having "not much consistency"; and rejecting his father's discipline when it seemed unfair, in which case "you got nothing but a lot of argument from me. " The mother was in some ways a better model: her discipline "de- prived us of privileges" but "had more effect" because of her greater consist- ency-"she meant what she said. " The father's capriciousness, as a masculine model to identify with, seemed to confuse Art's conception of his own ego- identity. For instance, in pursuing the career of artist? and having to compro- mise by becoming a commercial artist, Art was following his father, who "of course was fostering any particular art ability I had. " But "curiously enough, I don't think I have any particular art ability" though "no one else thinks it is either ordinary or mediocre. " Instead, "I think I could become a good musi- cian, pianist" (like his mother); although he admits on questioning that "I don't play the piano at all. " Art even makes explicit his conflict over in- ternalizing the father as a masculine model: though the father "championed my causes. ? ? . I didn't like my father as champion-preferred my mother as champion. " Art recognizes that his father was "temperamental," "running away from something, too . . . managed to dissipate a rather large fortune" by drinking and gambling which caused "considerable domestic strife: I didn't like it. " Yet having himself "started drinking," done some gambling, chafed against "commercializing" his artistic bent by getting fired from sev- eral jobs, and "transferred my dependency" onto prison by check-writing -Art senses that he has "probably got some of (my father's) extravagant qualities. "
Don's life, too, has been dominated by a neurotic overattachment to his mother. His underlying love-dependency has been masked, however, by his reciprocal role of nurturant protector to his mother. In pre-adolescence he became actively involved in the "bitter quarrels" between his parents con- cerning the father's "going with women. " He took the mother's side, strongly criticizing the father, who repeatedly "licked my pants off" for intervening. "At the same time, I tried to bring them back together; they still care for each other. " But his efforts at mediation were unsuccessful: his parents were divorced when he was 12, and from then on Don supported himself, living with several other boys. (One wonders if Don's experience of being squeezed between his two adult giants partly determines his opinion that "both labor and business sort of ignore the little fellow. ") Years later, in the mother's third marriage, her husband "took her" for a great deal of money, which he lost in a succession of wildcat schemes. Eventually she went into debt, mortgaging the old family farm. Don, having tried in vain to persuade her to divorce the man, and inhibiting conscious wishes to kill him, borrowed heavily to keep her in funds. He then carried out a series of
? 886 THE AUTHORIT ARIAN PERSONALITY
bank robberies (by himself) to make these debts good, and to continue supplying money to his mother. On the last one, after a wild automo- bile and foot chase by a bank manager, he let himself be caught rather than shoot the unarmed man with his loaded gun. Don recognizes that his mother is "governed by emotional biases," by "willingness to accept and believe too much . . . generous to a fault . . . not too practical, forbearing to a fault ? ? ? not assertive enough. " But he respects her deeply as "quite a per- son" who "has taken up something every year of her life. . . . She has recently learned to play the accordion; she studied music all her life. " Dan's ego- identity, like Art's, seems to be confused with respect to mother-versus father-identifications: he feels that he takes after his father in not being "governed by emotional biases as Mother is. " This conflicts sharply with his statement that prison is "the first time that I haven't been beset by all sorts of emotional problems. " Ambivalence toward his mother's "emotional biases" is indicated by his first, abrupt response to questioning about his mother's weaknesses: "Let's call it emotional and let it go at that. "
Jim's involvement with his mother is still deeper, with respect to both love-dependency feelings and nurturant protection of her, as well as strong hostility close to the surface. Conflict with the father is also more violent. Jim has been very close to his mother, as to an intimate sweetheart: "I could talk to my mother about any subject under the sun. No embarrassment there. I was interested in the same things. . . . Both of us are a little sensitive in temperament, kind of quiet. I think we both like a certain amount of solitude. I used to like to take her out to dinner, to the theatre quite often. " During the depression, as he struggled against poverty to support his mother, she says that he was "a prince, and went without eating himself to buy fruit for me. " Jim is able to criticize her as "not social enough . . . by herself too much" and as "having a little temper," but he formulates his near-conscious ambivalence: "It's a little difficult to find weaknesses in one's mother. . . . We usually tend to overlook a mother's weaknesses. . . . I find it difficult to find very many frailties. " At another point Jim indicates unmistakably the process of con- sciously struggling to inhibit, by what he calls "insight," resentments toward his mother. Citing, in response to questioning, an occasion on which she had spanked him impulsively for something that wasn't his fault, he declares: "At the time I resented it. Today I don't. I know she did things the best she could. . . . I didn't have enough insight then. " Of the father, who deserted the family for eight years during the 'thirties, Jim says: "My dad used to get drunk quite often, and he would beat (my mother) physically. . . . He's a little crude, so- cially. He's very happy-go-lucky. He likes to fish. He's very egotistical, I think a little too much so. Very stubborn in argument. If he believes a thing, why that's it. He probably has an inferiority complex which he never admits to himself. " The mother expresses the view that Jim was reduced to "a hope- less state of mind . . . due to his father's hardness and cruelty. " But note
? ness. )
CRIMINALITY AND ANTIDEMOCRA TIC TRENDS
Jim's love-oriented wish to believe that his relation to his father was none- theless "a very friendly relationship. He was pretty much of a pal. We liked to go places together, fishing, play cards, etc. W e had a lot of good times. " (Recall Jim's close relationship with an older man whom he persuaded to stop drinking, and who was in turn kind to him.
? CRIMINALITY AND ANTIDEMOCRA TIC TRENDS
8]9
his uncle as "pretty easy to get along with. " Then, in almost the next breath he n~veals that "he would stay away at night and drink, sometimes come home drunk. My aunt went off in a comer. " Wilbur indicates that he didn't dare to think seriously of criticizing the uncle or of protecting the aunt: (What was your reaction? ) "Didn't think much about it. "
Clarence, too, describes his (real) father as "easy to get along with. " What he admired most about the father was "the way he treated me. (Q. ) Never did abuse me or scold me. " Later, Clarence betrays the reason for his freedom from physical discipline, namely, his own cowed submission to stem parental authority. Although the father would "tell us what we should do, what he wanted us to do, and what he expected us to do," "there wasn't much (disci- pline) to exercise," simply because "we just did what they said. " A moment later, Clarence unwittingly reveals the parental intimidation that forced such utter submission from him: bemoaning the independence of children today, he declares that if he had ever answered his parents back the way he thinks children do now, "I wouldn't be able to sit down! " Clarence has justified his parents' intimidation of him by adopting the same general philosophy of authoritarianism: "Children didn't run wild in those days like they do nowadays. . . . If they have to whip them, I believe in whipping them. I don't believe in sparing the rod and spoiling the child. " This submissive acceptance of parental authoritarianism helps to explain Clarence's inability to evaluate his father objectively: he "didn't know (my father) had any weaknesses. " His description of his mother is equally superficial and moralistic: ''She was a nice, easy-going woman-good mother. " What he admired most about her, he states, was the "way she handled me-always tell me how good I was. " Clarence's distant, stereotyped attitude to his mother is further suggested by his purely physical conception of the way in which "I take after my mother more than my father. (Q. In what ways? ) Well, in my complexion.
(Q. What about personality traits? ) That I couldn't answer. "
After Eugene's father "ran away when I was 2 years old," his mother went to work as a waitress and "took care of me all my life. " Thus she was both mother and father to Eugene. His remarks about her suggest the fear which forms the basis of his "idealizing" her-namely a desperate dependence on her to "do things" for him: (Note the similarity in phrasing with Eugene's submissive-dependent "idealization" of Roosevelt, who "did things" for Eugene via the C. C. C. ). "She's good. In fact, the best. In other words, she's just tops with me. . . . Does everything for me she can. Writes me all the time. (Q. What do you admire most about her? ) Just about everything. (Q. ) Well, I guess her being so good and friendly to everybody, especially me. (Q. What's an example? ) Well, always trying to do everything for me. Very seldom go uptown without bringing something back for me. (Q. What else? ) When Father went away, Mother took care of me all her life, where she could have put me in a home some place. She always stayed with me in
? 88o THE AUTHORIT ARIAN PERSONALITY
trouble. " This dependence, this fear of loss of support, may have been a powerful force driving Eugene to submit to his mother's righteous re. Pres- sion. She is described as having taught him not values but absolutistic moral rules: "She always taught me the difference between right and wrong, the things I should do and shouldn't. " Her moralism, as he describes it, smoth- ered any chance of answering the implicit hostility behind it, because the hos- tility was veiled by a fog of self-righteousness: She would characteristically "just bawl us out" in a way that "made it seem like it was hurting her more than it did us. " "She'd look hurt," with the result that "it just hurt. I never sassed her back or said a mean t'hing. " The implied struggle to hold a desire to "sass her back" is illustrated further in a striking contradiction. The only thing Eugene can imagine that might have prevented his long record of "get- ting in trouble" is more strict moral repression by his mother: "To tell the truth, I don't think she was strict enough with us. " As evidence for this, he mentioned that he sometimes "came home later than I was supposed to. " A minute later, unaware of the contradiction, he declares: "She was pretty strict about that being home on time! " Eugene submitted to his mother's moralism by being "pretty good, up to the time I was r7 years old. " His subsequent "trouble"-gambling, drinking, fighting, and sexual promis- cuity-suggests a belated reaction against this submission. Meanwhile, the hostility which her "hurt" moralism made him suppress causes him to feel guilty and therefore obligated to "do things" for her. Asked what his main satisfactions were in the relationship with his mother, this guilt evokes the inappropriate response that "I guess I haven't made her very happy, but when I'm out there and going straight, I'll always take care of my mother. . . . I feel I've never treated her like I really should. "
2. FASCISTS
The 3 fascist men show, in more extreme form, essentially the same pat- tern of attitudes to parent figures as do the other prejudiced men. Es- pecially notable is their fearful submission to the father, in which homosexual aspects are hardly even disguised.
Buck verbalizes fairly directly his fear of sexuality in relation to his mother: "I'd kinda feel embarrassed if my mother ever brought up a subject like (sex). " His conception of her seems to be exclusively that of an agent to "do things" to gratify his dependence: "She was a hard-workin' lady, took care of us kids. " In fact, when asked what were his main satisfactions in his relationships with his parents, his response is limited to the purely external fact that "they gave me most anything I wanted. " As for his parents' per- sonalities, Buck's orientation toward the external leads him to ask: "You mean the people they associated with? " He cannot go beyond the most super- ficial references to their external roles, such as giving things to himself, being "hard-working" or a "businessman," "got drunk," "gave orders," etc.
? CRIMINALITY AND ANTIDEMOCRA TIC TRENDS 88r
This inhibitory block against any personal relation to them is consistent with the absolute submission which his father forced upon him. Buck "never did see any weaknesses in him. " His blind acceptance of his father's "rightness" about everything explains why: His father, he protests repeatedly;was "gen- erally right when he says something," "always trying to show us the right view of things," "always right in the things he said. " Buck "always figured I had it comin'" when he was "licked," and in his fright "knew right from wrong right away" as an absolute distinction never to be questioned. Hence his father usually needed only to "give us one look and we'd know what he meant. " Buck's fear leads him to say that his parents "never argued . . . even when he (the father) got drunk. " A moment later he naively reveals the reason for the lack of arguments, with no apparent awareness of the contradiction: "Mother didn't say anything. " "If they did" have any disagreements, "they never did let us kids know. " This denial is followed a few sentences later by a description of how sometimes "Dad would go into a rage and walk away . . . and Mother would go into a room and cry; but she'd get over it right away. " Of particular interest, in connection with Buck's fantasy that "most all of them Jews talk about sex mostly . . . about they're gonna (have fellatio per- formed on them) tonight," are some remarks about the ways in which his father (symbolized by Jews? ) used to "talk about sex. " The only sex in- struction Buck had, he declares, consisted in his father's frequent warnings to "watch out for these ch__" in order not to be exploited. In another context he relates how his father began, during his middle 'teens, to give him money for the express purpose of visiting prostitutes. Whether truth or fantasy, this is highly suggestive. It is not difficult to imagine that Buck may have been sexually overstimulated, rather crudely, by his father.
After Floyd's parents separated in his infancy, he rarely saw either of them. Until he was 7 he was raised by a foster mother who boarded children. From age 7 to 14 he lived with his father and a newly acquired stepmother, until he was sent away to boarding school. Floyd describes himself as grossly neglected by the foster mother: "Those people always had something to do from dawn to dusk, and as a kid I never had anything to say. " He "didn't get along too well" with the other children. Discipline was "more corporeal than anything else . . . for any infraction of her so-called rules. " The stepmother he scornfully resented as "just another woman, I guess," "just somebody that was there," and as "mean" and rejective toward himself as "that other woman's child. " He jealously contrasts her with his father as different "in every way. She wasn't his equal in anything-intellectually. " This phrasing raises a sus- picion that Floyd wanted to replace his stepmother and adopt the same "lieu- tenant" role toward his father as he seems to have adopted toward his crime partner. Indirect evidence for this hypothesis is to be found in his "mixed-up loyalty" to his real mother, suggesting definite identification with her feminine role: "I wish she had a husband, and that's the pitiful part of it-a woman
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shouldn't be alone. " There is much further evidence of Floyd's intense, if am- bivalent homosexual father fixation. He describes his father as a "very, very fine man, intelligent, understanding. Excellent father . . . in every way . . . a man everybody in the community looked up to. " As to what he admires most about his father, he "couldn't singularize on that. Just all of him. " The one shortcoming which he can think of in his father is aggressive abruptness in criticizing: "Well, he was outspoken. . . . If he thought you were no good or doing something wrong, he didn't hesitate to tell you. " But Floyd's fear of his father compels him to justify even this: "That's as much of an asset in ways. " In fact, Floyd cannot mobilize sufficient aggression toward his father to make a single criticism of him, not even of the father's virtual abandon-? ment of him during the first seven years of his life: "Just always been away, that's all. " He denies that his father ever punished him unjustly. A significant reason for Floyd's anxious splitting-off from conscious awareness of all negative feelings toward his father may be similar to the preoccupation of Eugene toward his mother-fear of complete abandonment. This is suggested by Floyd's description of the quarrels between his father and stepmother. These were "very sharp, and their remarks were lasting and bitter, like, 'We never should have taken him home. ' And Father would be confused. . . . Then he would punish me, once very hard; then he would talk to me until I went to sleep. " This dependence, as well as further signs of homosexual at- tachment, would seem to be expressed in the following remarks: "There's only one help I've got, and that's my father"; although "he's never been close to me," he "has stood by me. . . . This affair has brought us closer to- gether than before"; and "he has written me a beautiful letter. "
Adrian's case reveals in rather pure form the dynamics of a power-ridden type of inverted Oedipus complex: fear-driven homosexual submission to a hated father, and underlying identification with the mother's role as sub- ordinate. His mother, who died in her early twenties when he was only 5, seems to have been a very infantile person with "no sense of humor. " She neglected Adrian entirely except for flaunting her sexuality in his face, and then terrifying him by her "way of punishing me. " She was "a very beautiful woman," "very vivacious," "came out in---society . . . spent most of her life going out to dinners. . . . She mostly ignored me, but she always came to show me how she looked before she went out. . . . Except that my nurse said
I was this or that, she didn't seem to know personally what I was about. " Her punishments, "usually for something petty" such as "stealing fudge off a shelf," were capricious and deeply traumatic: "She locked me in dark closets -scared me to death," or "threatened to give me to a neighborhood woman whom she said was a witch. " Yet the fearful dependence of a little child apparently forced Adrian to repress the hate such treatment must have ex- cited: for in the same breath in which he reveals her self-centered cruelty, he idealizes her and is unable to criticize her for these things. (How did
? CRIMINALITY AND ANTIDEMOCRA TIC TRENDS
you feel toward your mother when she punished you? ) "I loved my mother. I was very crazy about my mother. (Did your mother ever punish you un- justly? ) No. She lost her temper unjustly. She was very vacillating-up one minute and down the next; never knew what she was going to do next. Peo- ple just had to stay out of her way when she was that way. " Questioned about her weaknesses or faults, Adrian declares: "In my memory, she just doesn't have any faults. " His mother's intimidation alone might be thought to have discouraged Adrian's heterosexual development.
But fear of a stern father appears to have combined with this to "stampede" Adrian into complete homosexual submission to the father and adoption of the mother's manipulative techniques. The father, who died several years ago, was a military officer who was "not the least bit demonstrative. . . . He dis- approved of any show of emotion of any kind. " Adrian was awed by "his consistency. " "He was a stickler for rules. . . . I thought of him as a sort of tyrant. " Yet, though he seemed "hard as nails with everyone else," he was "very easy with me," because "if my father punished me, (my mother) was so upset that it didn't go. " Adrian describes specific episodes that would seem to have encouraged a fearful "feminine" attitude toward the father: "In- cidentally, whenever she cried, I cried, too. . . . She ofteri threw tantrums, and father just put on his hat and went out, which only made her all the madder.
And I would always cry with her. . . . I always felt when he scolded her, he was scolding me. " Adrian indicates that from earliest infancy he adopted his mother's techniques for manipulating the father: "I hollered . . . usually got my way. In fact, all I ever had to do was cry about anything, and he'd do whatever it was that upset me. " "And remember," says Adrian in explaining his father's coddling him as the father coddled Adrian's mother, "that I look like my mother. " Note the continuing father fixation: "I missed him very much when I was at the boarding house. . . . When I was sick, I used to . . . daydream about his coming to see me. . . . I've saved all my letters to him. . . . He very dramatically returned all my letters, like to an old love. I loved my father very much. " Quite unable to assert any genuine inner independ- ence, Adrian's furtive resentment broke through his weak superego in the form of delinquent rebelliousness: "I became such a worry to him . . . left school when I pleased. I overdrew my charge accounts, and he was ill. " This was followed by an endless succession of delinquencies as an adult. "When he died,'' however, "and when I realized I could never see him again," Adrian began to feel intense shame over his delinquencies and to feel even more deeply submissive to his father: "I put him on a pedestal now he wasn't on for me as a child. . . . He haunts me: I'm always wondering if he would approve of this or approve of that. . . . His judgment was always right. . . . And when I hear opinions expressed, I wonder if they would be his opinion. " Adrian has even made a belated stab at catching up with father-masculinity identi- fications. Before his short-lived parole, he asserted that he was through with
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his "repulsive" homosexuality, and that although he would have been "happier as a woman," he had "more determination than I am given credit for" and "can live a man's life, since this is a man's world. " & we have seen before, his "determination" lasted for only about two weeks.
3. LOW SCORERS
In contrast with the high scorers' submission, the low-scoring inter- viewees exhibit more underlying independence toward parents, especially toward the father. This includes some capacity for objective evaluation of parents, as well as sonie ability to resist parental authority on the basis of principle. In each case the preferred parent is definitely the mother, who is loved and respected as an individual. At the same time, each of these men reveals a deep ambivalence toward the mother, which is (almost consciously) inhibited, but not denied by masks of overidealization and reverence. The ambivalence appears to center around frustrated love-dependency longings. It is this primary love-orientation, however, which forms the basis of genuine liking for people and for democratic identifications. And to the extent that these men carry out identifications with underdogs and show resistance to status quo injustice, a basis was formed in early assertions of independence as underdogs in relation to parental authority. Their failure to carry out such identification fully may be due to inhibitions against asserting full in- dependence from parents.
By his "autopsychoanalysis," Art has made partly conscious his "Oedipus complex"; or, as he says he prefers to call it (denying specifically sexual feel- ings toward his mother)-his "dependency complex," later displaced onto mother substitutes. After the death of the father when Art was 9, several factors combined to intensify this complex. His sister and (paternal) half- brother went to stay with relatives. This left Art alone "at home with Mother, who had an advertising job. " Their relationship, he indicates, was quite close, but with himself in a dependent role (though with reciprocating nurturance) toward his mother-provider: "I stayed at home and cooked the meals and did the housework. " She apparently overstimulated his sexual fan- tasies, in a way that made it harder for him to overcome the mother fixation, by glorifying his body as a "precious possession. " And when he was "about 14" she presented to him "the business of childbirth and conception . . . in a very cold-blooded way" (note the almost-conscious ambivalence toward the mother) including an arrangement for him to watch several childbirth operations surreptitiously. Withal, Art's image of her stresses inner, psy- chological values: "An intellectual and a very well-educated person. Her principal gift seems to be that of perception. And a musician-pianist- . . . not by trade but certainly by nature. " Her frailties include "a psychological disturbance as great as mine. Fortunately didn't cause her as much trouble, but certainly caused her as much anguish. " The mother's emotional support
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seemed to help Art assert considerable independence of his father: e. g. , ex- plicitly rejecting the latter's anti-Semitism; evaluating him with some critical- ness as "spoiled" by his "rich parents" as "an only child"; criticizing his disci- pline as having "not much consistency"; and rejecting his father's discipline when it seemed unfair, in which case "you got nothing but a lot of argument from me. " The mother was in some ways a better model: her discipline "de- prived us of privileges" but "had more effect" because of her greater consist- ency-"she meant what she said. " The father's capriciousness, as a masculine model to identify with, seemed to confuse Art's conception of his own ego- identity. For instance, in pursuing the career of artist? and having to compro- mise by becoming a commercial artist, Art was following his father, who "of course was fostering any particular art ability I had. " But "curiously enough, I don't think I have any particular art ability" though "no one else thinks it is either ordinary or mediocre. " Instead, "I think I could become a good musi- cian, pianist" (like his mother); although he admits on questioning that "I don't play the piano at all. " Art even makes explicit his conflict over in- ternalizing the father as a masculine model: though the father "championed my causes. ? ? . I didn't like my father as champion-preferred my mother as champion. " Art recognizes that his father was "temperamental," "running away from something, too . . . managed to dissipate a rather large fortune" by drinking and gambling which caused "considerable domestic strife: I didn't like it. " Yet having himself "started drinking," done some gambling, chafed against "commercializing" his artistic bent by getting fired from sev- eral jobs, and "transferred my dependency" onto prison by check-writing -Art senses that he has "probably got some of (my father's) extravagant qualities. "
Don's life, too, has been dominated by a neurotic overattachment to his mother. His underlying love-dependency has been masked, however, by his reciprocal role of nurturant protector to his mother. In pre-adolescence he became actively involved in the "bitter quarrels" between his parents con- cerning the father's "going with women. " He took the mother's side, strongly criticizing the father, who repeatedly "licked my pants off" for intervening. "At the same time, I tried to bring them back together; they still care for each other. " But his efforts at mediation were unsuccessful: his parents were divorced when he was 12, and from then on Don supported himself, living with several other boys. (One wonders if Don's experience of being squeezed between his two adult giants partly determines his opinion that "both labor and business sort of ignore the little fellow. ") Years later, in the mother's third marriage, her husband "took her" for a great deal of money, which he lost in a succession of wildcat schemes. Eventually she went into debt, mortgaging the old family farm. Don, having tried in vain to persuade her to divorce the man, and inhibiting conscious wishes to kill him, borrowed heavily to keep her in funds. He then carried out a series of
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bank robberies (by himself) to make these debts good, and to continue supplying money to his mother. On the last one, after a wild automo- bile and foot chase by a bank manager, he let himself be caught rather than shoot the unarmed man with his loaded gun. Don recognizes that his mother is "governed by emotional biases," by "willingness to accept and believe too much . . . generous to a fault . . . not too practical, forbearing to a fault ? ? ? not assertive enough. " But he respects her deeply as "quite a per- son" who "has taken up something every year of her life. . . . She has recently learned to play the accordion; she studied music all her life. " Dan's ego- identity, like Art's, seems to be confused with respect to mother-versus father-identifications: he feels that he takes after his father in not being "governed by emotional biases as Mother is. " This conflicts sharply with his statement that prison is "the first time that I haven't been beset by all sorts of emotional problems. " Ambivalence toward his mother's "emotional biases" is indicated by his first, abrupt response to questioning about his mother's weaknesses: "Let's call it emotional and let it go at that. "
Jim's involvement with his mother is still deeper, with respect to both love-dependency feelings and nurturant protection of her, as well as strong hostility close to the surface. Conflict with the father is also more violent. Jim has been very close to his mother, as to an intimate sweetheart: "I could talk to my mother about any subject under the sun. No embarrassment there. I was interested in the same things. . . . Both of us are a little sensitive in temperament, kind of quiet. I think we both like a certain amount of solitude. I used to like to take her out to dinner, to the theatre quite often. " During the depression, as he struggled against poverty to support his mother, she says that he was "a prince, and went without eating himself to buy fruit for me. " Jim is able to criticize her as "not social enough . . . by herself too much" and as "having a little temper," but he formulates his near-conscious ambivalence: "It's a little difficult to find weaknesses in one's mother. . . . We usually tend to overlook a mother's weaknesses. . . . I find it difficult to find very many frailties. " At another point Jim indicates unmistakably the process of con- sciously struggling to inhibit, by what he calls "insight," resentments toward his mother. Citing, in response to questioning, an occasion on which she had spanked him impulsively for something that wasn't his fault, he declares: "At the time I resented it. Today I don't. I know she did things the best she could. . . . I didn't have enough insight then. " Of the father, who deserted the family for eight years during the 'thirties, Jim says: "My dad used to get drunk quite often, and he would beat (my mother) physically. . . . He's a little crude, so- cially. He's very happy-go-lucky. He likes to fish. He's very egotistical, I think a little too much so. Very stubborn in argument. If he believes a thing, why that's it. He probably has an inferiority complex which he never admits to himself. " The mother expresses the view that Jim was reduced to "a hope- less state of mind . . . due to his father's hardness and cruelty. " But note
? ness. )
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Jim's love-oriented wish to believe that his relation to his father was none- theless "a very friendly relationship. He was pretty much of a pal. We liked to go places together, fishing, play cards, etc. W e had a lot of good times. " (Recall Jim's close relationship with an older man whom he persuaded to stop drinking, and who was in turn kind to him.
