The Offspring of Aeolus
On the Incest Taboo
by
Dr. Sam Vaknin
Incest is not such a clear-cut matter as it has been made out to
be over millennia of taboos. Many participants claim to have enjoyed
the act and its physical and emotional consequences. It is often
the result of seduction. In some cases, two consenting and fully
informed adults are involved. Many types of relationships, which
are defined as incestuous, are between genetically unrelated parties
(a stepfather and a daughter), or between fictive kin or between
classificatory kin (that belong to the same matriline or patriline).
In certain societies (the American Indians or the Chinese) it is
sufficient to carry the same family name (=to belong to the same
clan) and marriage is forbidden. Some incest prohibitions relate
to sexual acts - other to marriage. In some societies, incest is
mandatory or prohibited, according to the social class (Bali). In
others, the Royal House started a tradition of incestuous marriages,
which were imitated by lower classes (Ancient Egypt). The list is
long and it serves to demonstrate the diversity of this most universal
taboo. Generally put, we can say that a prohibition to have sex
with or marry a related person should be classified as an incest
prohibition, no matter the nature of the relationship.
Perhaps
the strongest feature of incest has been hitherto downplayed: that
it is, essentially, an autoerotic act. Having sex with a first-degree
blood relative is like having sex with yourself. It is a Narcissistic
act and like all acts Narcissistic, it involves the objectification
of the partner. The incestuous Narcissist over-values and then devalues
his sexual partner. He is devoid of empathy (cannot see the other's
point of view or put himself in her shoes). For an in depth treatment
of Narcissism and its psychosexual dimension, see: "Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism
Revisited"...
But
incest involves more than a manifestation of a personality disorder
or of a paraphilia (incest is considered by many to be a class of
pedophilia). It harks back to the very nature of the family. It
is closely entangled with its functions and with its contribution
to the development of the individual within it.
A
family is a mechanism of allocation of genetic and materialistic
wealth. Worldly goods are passed on from one generation to the next
through succession, inheritance and residence. Genetic material
is handed down through the sexual act. It is the mandate of the
family to increase both, either by accumulating property or by exogamy
(marrying outside the family). Clearly, incest prevents both. It
preserves a limited genetic pool and makes an increase of material
possessions through intermarriage all but impossible.
Once
allocated, the family is an efficient venue of transferring material
wealth, as well as transmitting information and messages horizontally
(among family members) and vertically (down the generations). A
large part of the process of socialization still rides on the back
of this property of the family. It is still by far the most heavyweight
agent of socialization. Gender roles, for instance, are learned,
emulated and assimilated mainly through the family. Incest, in itself,
isolated from its social context and judgement, should not have
affected this function in particular. There is no logical reason
why incest should interfere with socialization, role learning or
with the allocation of material resources (except, perhaps, when
it comes to inheritance). Paradoxically, it is the reaction of society
that transforms incest into such a disruptive phenomenon. The condemnation,
the horror, the revulsion and the social sanctions distort the internal
processes of the incestuous family. It is from society that the
child learns that something is horribly wrong and that he should
not adopt the offending parent as a role model. The formation of
the Superego is stunted and it remains infantile, ideal, sadistic,
perfectionist, demanding and punishing. The Ego, on the other hand,
is likely to be replaced by a False Ego version, whose job it is
to suffer the consequences of the socially hideous act. To sum up
: social control in the case of incest is most likely to produce
a Narcissist. Disempathic, exploitative and in eternal search for
Narcissistic supply – the child becomes a replica of his offending
parent.
One
of the main businesses of the family is to teach to its members
self control, self regulation and healthy adaptation. Family members
share space and resources, for instance. Siblings share the mother's
emotions and attention. Similarly, the family educates its young
members to master their drives and to postpone the gratification
and satisfaction, which attaches to acting upon them. The incest
taboo teaches children how to control their erotic drive by abstaining
from ingratiating themselves with members of the opposite sex within
the same family. There could be little question that incest constitutes
a lack of control and impedes the proper separation of impulse (or
stimulus) from the response to it. Additionally, it probably interferes
with the defensive aspects of the family's existence. It is through
the family that aggression is legitimately channelled, expressed
and externalized. By imposing discipline and hierarchy on its members,
the family is transformed into a cohesive and efficient war machine.
It sucks in economic resources, social status and members of other
families. It forms alliances and fights other alliances over scarce
goods, tangible and intangible. This efficacy is adversely affected
by incest. It is virtually impossible to maintain discipline and
hierarchy in an incestuous family wherein some members assume sexual
roles not normally theirs. Sex is an expression of power – emotional
and physical. The members of the family involved in the incest surrender
power and assume it out of the regular flow patterns that have made
the family the formidable apparatus that it is. This weakens the
family, both internally and externally. Internally, emotive reactions
(such as jealousy of other family members) and clashing authorities
and responsibilities are likely to undo the delicate unit. Externally,
the family will be vulnerable to ostracism and more official forms
of intervention and dismantling.
Finally,
the family is an identity endowment mechanism. It bestows identity
upon its members. Internally, the members of the family derive meaning
from their position in the family tree (coupled with societal expectations
and maxims). Externally, through exogamy, the family absorbs other
identities and develops its own. Exogamy, as often noted, allows
for the creation of extended alliances. It reduces the solidarity
of the nuclear, original family by extending it to “strangers”.
The “identity creep” of the family is in total opposition to incest.
The latter even increases the solidarity and cohesiveness of the
incestuous family – but at the expense of its ability to digest
and absorb other identities of other family units.
Freud
said that incest provokes horror because it touches upon our forbidden,
ambivalent emotions towards members of our close family. This ambivalence
covers both aggression towards other members (forbidden and punishable)
and (sexual) attraction to them (doubly forbidden and punishable).
Others had an opposite view (Westermark) that “familiarity breeds
contempt” and that the incest taboo simply reflects emotional reality
rather than fight against inbred instincts.
There
is little doubt that incest has nothing to do with genetic considerations.
In today's world incest does not need to result in pregnancy and
the transmission of genetic material. Good contraceptives should,
therefore, encourage bad, incestuous, couples. In many other life
forms, inbreeding or straightforward incest is the norm (chimpanzees,
to mention close relatives). Finally, incest prohibitions apply
to non-genetically-related people in most countries.
The
more primitive the society, the more strict and elaborate the set
of incest prohibitions and the fiercer the reactions of society
to its violation. It appears that the less violent the dispute settlement
methods in a given culture – the more lenient the attitude to incest.
Incest seems to interfere with well-established and rigid patterns
of inheritance. This interference led, in all probability, to disputes.
In more primitive societies, arms were resorted to in an effort
to resolve conflicts. To prevent recurrent and costly bloodshed
was one of the intentions of the incest taboo.
The
incest taboo is, therefore, a cultural trait. Protective of the
efficient mechanism of the family, society sought to minimize disruption
to its activities and to the clear flows of authority, responsibilities,
material wealth and information horizontally and vertically. Incest
threatened to unravel this magnificent creation. Alarmed by the
possible consequences (internal and external feuds, a rise in the
level of aggression and violence) – society introduced the taboo.
It came replete with physical and emotional sanctions: stigmatization,
revulsion and horror, imprisonment, the demolition of the errant
and socially mutant family cell. As long as societies revolve around
the relegation of power, its sharing, its acquisition and dispensation
– there will always exist an incest taboo. But in a different society
and culture, it is conceivable not to have such a taboo. This would
be either utopian or dystopian, depending on the reader.
Dr.
Sam Vaknin is the author of "Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited" and "After
the Rain - How the West Lost the East".
He is a columnist in "Central Europe Review", United Press
International (UPI) and InternetContent.net and the editor of mental
health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory,
Suite101, Go.com and searcheurope.com.
He is the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.
His web site: http://samvak.tripod.com