The Shelby Paradox
Power, Trauma, and the Mind at War
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Lu par :
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Myriam Berger
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De :
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A. Lavie
The Shelby Paradox: Power, Trauma, and the Mind at War is a psychological study of Tommy Shelby, one of television's most compelling and enigmatic figures. Rather than treating him simply as a gangster, this book examines him as a man shaped by war, silence, masculinity, grief, and the relentless need for control.
Through a carefully structured analysis, the book traces Tommy's journey from the pre-war self to the battlefield, then into memory, hypervigilance, emotional suppression, intimacy, moral injury, collapse, and the fragile possibility of awareness. It shows how trauma reorganizes the mind, how power can become compensation for inner fragility, and how strength can conceal unresolved pain.
Blending narrative analysis, clinical insight, and philosophical reflection, The Shelby Paradox places Tommy Shelby within a broader human reality: the high-functioning wounded self who appears unbreakable while quietly living inside an unfinished war. The book also extends its argument through comparisons with real and literary figures shaped by combat trauma, showing that Tommy's condition is part of a larger psychological pattern.
For readers drawn to Peaky Blinders, trauma psychology, masculinity, and the hidden architecture of human behavior, this book offers a sharp, reflective, and powerful interpretation of what it means to survive without healing.
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