In the pre-modern era, those who committed serious crimes would
invariably be treated with extreme cruelty - often punished, tortured,
eviscerated, and executed in the most grisly, sadistic fashion. Over
time, the treatment of offenders has become more enlightened and more
benign. But have we really progressed sufficiently in our approach to
the rehabilitation and cure of vicious perpetrators of savage acts? This
book considers the intersection between madness and violence across the
ages, and investigates how Sigmund Freud and the early generation of
psychoanalysts and psychotherapists challenged the more primitive,
punitive models. Professor Kahr also discusses some landmark projects,
which help to humanise serious criminal offenders and further our
understanding of the ways in which severe early childhood trauma plays
an important role in the genesis of extreme criminality.