"Only in the general social-psychological literature will the reader find discussions of the sexual obsession of the Nazis, but these discussions, coming from scholars without specialized knowledge of Nazi Germany, are fragmentary and only partially illuminating.<30> Nearly all who treat this subject see it as an instance of psychic projection. The theory of projection, advanced by Freud, postulates that those who repress within themselves undesirable feelings and impulses such as aggressive urges and sexual drives may seek relief for the gnawing feeling of unconscious guilt by projecting their illicit desires upon others and righteously attacking them, thereby externaizing their feelings. This Freudian insight is declared to be valid even by so skeptical a critic of psychoanalysis as H.J. Eysenck, who summarizes it thus: There is a tendency in people to attribute personal qualities they themselves possess, but do not admit possessing, to other people. Thus a person who is stingy but will not admit this to himself will tend to attribute stinginess to others to quite an unreasonable extent. Thus, similarly, those qualities which the prejudiced person represses in himself tend to be projected and attributed to other people; it is not the prejudiced person himself but others who are seen as hostile and threatening, or else his own weakness leads to exaggerated condemnation of everything that is weak."<31> Footnotes: 30. See for example Allport, G.W., "The Nature of Prejudice," New York, 1958, pp. 349-355 31. Eysenck, H.J., "Uses and Abuses of Psychology," London, 1954. P. 274 (Goldhagen, Erich. "Nazi Sexual Demonology," Midstream, Vol. 27, No. 5, May 1981, p. 11)
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