Like victims of the Stockholm syndrome, culturalists believe that if they love their captors their lives will be spared. |
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It can paralyse state administrations and frighten its victims into variations on the Stockholm syndrome. |
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Perhaps living in totalitarian Baghdad has left some of the press here with a case of Stockholm syndrome. |
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She often asked jokingly if I had Stockholm syndrome when I spoke of this period of time, but I always denied it. |
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Are you sure these feeling are not just part of you suffering from Stockholm syndrome? |
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He didn't experience Stockholm syndrome, identifying with triumphant soldiers roaring by in impetuous tanks. |
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We were to be hostage to military kindness, stultified by Stockholm syndrome. |
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He clearly demonstrated that he is the latest victim of the Stockholm syndrome. |
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As the trip continued, the author wondered if Stockholm syndrome explained why he was starting to think that the creationist geology had some sense to it. |
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In a kind of Stockholm syndrome, of identifying with the aggressor, they identified with the Union and disproportionately supported and fought and died in its wars. |
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What Susan might be talking about a little is the Stockholm syndrome. |
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The women show displeasure and resist a bit, but soon, under the spell of some Stockholm syndrome, they caress and embrace the men. |
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Handily unbinding himself, Harold becomes their surrogate father: Stockholm syndrome in reverse. |
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This bond was first identified during a bank hostage incident in Sweden and is called the Stockholm syndrome. |
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If you were kidnapped, might you be a candidate for Stockholm syndrome? |
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So much for the Stockholm syndrome the GOP House leadership insists represents political reality. |
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But some former teachers describe the defense of Friend as a version of Stockholm syndrome. |
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Perhaps a bit of Stockholm syndrome after eight months of filming behind the scenes at Vogue. |
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Then a kind of Stockholm syndrome comes into play, a survival mechanism that leads presidential appointees to defend and sympathize with their bureaucratic captors. |
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His description of Falluja, tinged with Stockholm syndrome rationalizations, painted a picture of what can only be described as collective insanity. |
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He may also be suffering from the political equivalent of Stockholm syndrome, where a victim comes to identify with the objectives of his captors. |
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I was furious and disturbed that I had fallen to the Stockholm syndrome. |
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To some observers it sounded like a classic case of Stockholm syndrome. |
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While the psychological shorthand for hostages who develop emotional attachments to their kidnappers is Stockholm syndrome, freed captives often protest the term's simplification and pathologization of their experience. |
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Not because of succumbing to Stockholm syndrome, but from a position of wanting to understand people. |
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In an Iran-sized political Stockholm syndrome, neither the government nor the people end up threatening one another. |
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People might be suffering from the Stockholm syndrome.4 These are complicated dynamics since there is the need to be socially recognized and loved. |
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In 1973, four Swedes that were held in a bank vault for six days during a robbery became attached to their captors, a phenomenon dubbed the Stockholm syndrome. |
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However, a device will kill him if he leaves his car, thugs employed by the politician are out to murder him, and his passenger has a bad case of Stockholm syndrome. |
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The video touches on the hunt and the hunted, Stockholm syndrome, and when right and wrong are not easily defined in a blood-thirsty, chaotic society. |
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Inside is a psychological drama that explores the effects of Stockholm Syndrome on a kidnap victim. |
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The unchanging culture in Turkey, with regard to the political role of the military is of the Stockholm Syndrome writ large. |
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Sullivan allegedly told them their daughter suffers from Stockholm Syndrome brought on by abuse in her home, something the teen told police was untrue, court documents said. |
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