Sigmund Freud never wrote much about war and related atrocity.
All his contributions on the topic collected by Maud Ellmann in On
Murder, Mourning and Melancholia (2005) don’t really make for a massive
volume and it is probably fair to say that the works in there that do
deal with war specifically are probably among those by the great psychoanalyst
that never managed to achieve sustained impact across the
humanities and social sciences. There is one exception though: Totem
and Taboo (published originally in 1913, just before the outbreak of the
First World War) is still widely read and cited. And not only is it the
case that Freud’s essay is still resonating across time, it is also crucially
important for the very theme of this collection. Indeed, Totem and
Taboo, one could argue, is Freud’s speculation on the birth of humanity.