An outwardly perfect English village can hide a surprising amount of cruelty.

When Christine Joanna Hart arrives in the affluent village of St Margaret's, she expects the gentle rhythms of middle-class English life. Instead she encounters something colder. At the school gates, beneath polite smiles and immaculate houses, social exclusion operates with quiet precision. As a single mother among married couples, she and her son find themselves subtly pushed to the margins.

For Hart, the experience becomes more than personal.

Years earlier, as a Fleet Street journalist, she had been commissioned by The Guardian to travel to Washington State Penitentiary and interview Kenneth Bianchi, the notorious Hillside Strangler. During their conversations, Bianchi spoke with unsettling clarity about the emotional brutality of his adoptive mother and the psychological damage that shaped him.

The contrast begins to haunt her.

On one side of the world, a serial killer describes a childhood shaped by maternal coldness. On the other, in a respectable English village, a quieter form of female social cruelty unfolds beneath the surface of polite society.

As Hart later retrains as a psychotherapist, she begins to examine these experiences through a psychological lens. What happens when the feminine instinct to nurture becomes something colder? How do envy, exclusion, and emotional brutality shape the human psyche?

Part memoir, part psychological exploration, The Psychology of the Dark Feminine investigates maternal narcissism, female rivalry, and the shadow side of the feminine psyche. Moving between an English village and an American maximum-security prison, Hart explores the unsettling parallels between everyday cruelty and its most extreme psychological consequences.

At its heart, this is a story about the shadow that can exist behind civility and the forces that drive human beings to seek warmth in the darkest places.

Christine Joanna Hart is a psychotherapist and Sunday Times bestselling author. Before retraining in psychotherapy, she worked as a Fleet Street journalist and was commissioned by The Guardian to interview serial killer Kenneth Bianchi, the Hillside Strangler, in Washington State Penitentiary. Her work explores the hidden psychological forces that shape relationships, identity, and the darker edges of human behaviour.



Autorentext

Christine Joanna Hart is a certified trauma psychotherapist specialising in adoption trauma, attachment wounds, destructive relationship patterns, shame, and parts-based therapy. Her work focuses on identity fragmentation, repetition compulsion, trauma bonding, and the unconscious forces that shape intimate relationships.


A Sunday Times bestselling author published by Hodder & Stoughton, Hart previously worked as an investigative journalist for the Daily Mail and Sunday Times, and has appeared on GMTV, BBC World Service, and Amazon Prime. Her Psychology of Trauma series explores how unresolved trauma drives power dynamics, attraction to narcissistic personalities, and the search for redemption through love.


She works with individuals, couples, and adolescents seeking deep psychological transformation.

For therapy enquiries and further writing, visit her website or Facebook page. :

Titel
The Psychology of The Dark Feminine (The Divided Self Series, #3)
EAN
9798233750267
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
30.03.2026
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
0.49 MB