ABSTRACT

The Multicultural Imagination is a challenging inquiry into the complex interrelationship between our ideas about race and color and the unconscious. Michael Vannoy Adams takes a fresh look at the contributions of psychoanalysis to a question which affects every individual who tries to establish an effective personal identity in the context of their received 'racial' identity.
Adams argues that 'race' is just as important as sex or any other content of the unconcscious, drawing on clinical case materal from contemporary patients for whom 'race' or color is a vitally significant social and political concern that impacts on them personally. He does not assume that racism or 'colorism' will simply vanish if we psychoanalyse them, but shows how a non-defensive ego and a self-image that is receptive to other-images can move us towards a more productive discourse of cultural differences.
Wide-ranging in its references and scope, this is a book that provokes the reader - analyst or not - to confront personally those unconscious attitudes which stand in the way of authentic multicultural relationships.

chapter Chapter 1|16 pages

Pluralism, racism, and colorism

chapter Chapter 2|20 pages

Whiteness and blackness, nature and culture

chapter Chapter 3|14 pages

The cultural unconscious and collective differences

chapter Chapter 4|17 pages

Going black, going primitive, going instinctive

chapter Chapter 5|17 pages

Jung in “Black” Africa

chapter Chapter 6|16 pages

Hair: kinky, straight, bald

chapter Chapter 7|19 pages

Jung on “race” and the unconscious

chapter Chapter 8|22 pages

The color complex

chapter Chapter 9|17 pages

The mirror of identity

chapter Chapter 11|14 pages

The empathic self: going other, going different

chapter Chapter 12|18 pages

Case material, “race” material

chapter Chapter 13|16 pages

Color-change dreams and “racial” identity

chapter Chapter 14|14 pages

A color-change from brown to white to black

chapter Chapter 15|7 pages

Old Man River