“Getting even”: Clinical considerations of adaptive and maladaptive vengeance |
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Authors: | Martha A. Gabriel Ph.D. Gail W. Monaco Ph.D. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Graduate School of Social Work, New York University, 3 Washington Square North #44, 10003 New York, NY;(2) 50 East 10th St. #4A, 10003 New York, NY |
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Abstract: | This article is intended to acquaint the reader with the concept of vengeance. Conceptualized as the intense, compelling wish or intention to get even, right a wrong, or avenge an injury, vengeance is best understood on a continuum from innocuous retaliatory fantasies/actions on one end of the continuum to meeting out of death and destruction on the other end. This article identifies various manifestations of vengeance, discusses theoretical formulations related to affects in general and vengeance, in particular, and presents a series of case vignettes which highlight the adaptive and maladaptive function of this psychological phenomenon. |
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