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Jean Genet: Why He Still Fascinates Psychologists

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychopractitioner
6 min read

Genet: A Psychological Portrait

From the Poetry of Crime to Holy Transfiguration

Jean Genet embodies one of the most fascinating enigmas in contemporary psychology: how could an abandoned child, locked away in institutions, who became a thief and then a prostitute, transform shame into liturgy, criminality into poetry, and ultimately transfigure himself into an almost saintly figure? This psychological portrait explores, through the lens of cognitive-behavioral therapies, the mental mechanisms of one who made the abject into a cathedral.

I. Young's Early Maladaptive Schemas: The Architecture of Abandonment

The naked child facing the void

Jeffrey Young's theory of early maladaptive schemas illuminates Genet's trajectory in singular fashion. Born of an unknown mother, placed in state care at seven months old, the child immediately internalized the fundamental schema of abandonment and emotional instability. This primal rupture did not need to be constructed as a problem: it was the raw material of his being.

Placement in a foster family in Alligny-en-Morvan, followed by institutional care, crystallized a second major schema: that of defectiveness and shame. At twelve years old, labeled a thief by his educators, Genet internalized the social verdict as an ontological essence. He did not commit reprehensible acts; he was reprehensible.

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These two schemas generated a paradoxical psychological architecture:

  • Rejection of the social system that had rejected him

  • Identification with the role of pariah as the only available identity

  • Hypersensitivity to humiliation transformed into aesthetic claims


The schema of emotional deprivation

Genet also developed an acute emotional deprivation schema. Never loved unconditionally, he learned that love had to be negotiated, stolen, earned through infamy itself. Prostitution thus became the final currency of emotional exchange: selling one's body to receive a morsel of attention, however shameful.

II. Personal Architecture: The Criminal-Poet

Personality and characteristic traits

Genet did not present a nosographically pure pathology. However, psychological reading reveals a personality structured around:

Paradoxical extraversion: Genet sought intense social stimulation not from a need for affiliation, but from a need for existential confirmation. Each prison encounter, each romantic relationship with murderers or pimps, represented a desperate quest for recognition of the rejected. Controlled impulsivity: Unlike the classical delinquent, Genet conducted his thefts with an almost ritualistic rationality. He did not steal out of necessity but as metaphysical protest. Each theft was an act of dark poetry. Inverted conscientiousness: Genet developed a very strict underground morality. He scrupulously respected the code of honor among thieves, refused to betray his accomplices, remained faithful to his criminal loves. His ethics were not those of a citizen, but they existed, mercilessly. Compulsive creative openness: Confined to prison, Genet transmuted imprisonment into literary creation. Our Lady of the Flowers, The Thief's Journal, The Maids, The Screens: the creative matrix never stopped, channeling anguish into beauty.

III. Psychological Mechanisms: From Distortion to Transfiguration

Defense mechanisms and cognitive restructuring

CBT identified several sophisticated defense mechanisms in Genet:

Aestheticizing rationalization: Genet did not deny his crimes; he glorified them. To each reprehensible act corresponded a metaphysical justification. Theft became protest against the bourgeois order; crime became liturgy. It was less denial than symbolic transmutation. Cathartic projection: Genet projected his own wounds of abandonment onto his characters. Divine, Darling, Solange, and Claire became avatars of his fragmented self. Through them, he lived multiple lives, particularly that of the beloved he had never been. Creative sublimation: Faced with fundamental cognitive distortions ("I am waste," "No one will love me"), Genet activated the healthiest psychological mechanism: sublimation. Agony became language, prison became theater, shame became liturgy.

The process of "holy transfiguration"

Progressively, Genet performed what we might call an inversive cognition: he accepted the verdict of social rejection, but inverted it. His holiness consisted precisely in what no one expected from a criminal: emotional generosity.

At the end of his life, Genet fought for Palestinian rights, became a photographer of rebellions, placed himself on the side of the voiceless. The initial abandonment schema, rather than generating nihilistic misanthropy, generated radical compassion toward all the excluded.

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IV. CBT Lessons: Restructuring and Redemption

Therapeutic application of the Genet model

Genet's trajectory offers counterintuitive lessons for CBT practice:

1. Radical acceptance of the schema as a condition for transformation

Contrary to the classical approach that aims to reduce maladaptive schemas, Genet first inhabited them completely. Only after this total immersion could he transcend them. The lesson: sometimes therapy is not reduction, but dilation, complete acceptance that creates the inner space necessary for change.

2. The creative function of cognitive distortion

Genet's schemas of abandonment and shame did not simply generate psychopathology; they generated creative genius. CBT should not systematically eliminate distortions: certain distortions, when channeled, become resources. Genet's wound became his power.

3. The importance of the benevolent witness

Genet never had access to formal psychotherapy. But he had witnesses: Cocteau, Sartre, prison friends. These witnesses validated his humanity without absolving him of his acts. CBT should emphasize that healing passes through the existence of someone to see us.

4. Redemption as a continuous process

Genet never considered himself "healed." He remained saint-criminal until his last breath, oscillating between rage and tenderness. Western behavioral therapy valorizes "resolution"; Genet teaches that psychological maturity can be a creative oscillation sustained.

Conclusion: The Genet Paradox

Jean Genet teaches us that a life can simultaneously be crime and poetry, shame and holiness, destruction and creation. His psychology is not a case to "treat" according to standards, but a living koan: how to transform damnation into beatitude without denying the damnation?

For the cognitive-behavioral therapist, Genet remains a salutary provocation. He reminds us that sometimes true mental health is not social adaptation, but creative fidelity to one's sublimated wounds.


Suggestive References
  • Jean Genet, The Thief's Journal (1949)
  • Jean-Paul Sartre, Saint Genet, Actor and Martyr (1952)
  • Jeffrey Young et al., Schema Therapy (2003)

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