ABSTRACT

Do political concerns belong in psychodynamic treatment?

How do class and politics shape the unconscious?

The effects of an increasingly polarized, insecure and threatening world mean that the ideologically enforced split between the political order and personal life is becoming difficult to sustain. This book explores the impact of the social and political domains at the individual level.

The contributions included in this volume describe how issues of class and politics, and the intense emotions they engender, emerge in the clinical setting and how psychotherapists can respectfully address them rather than deny their significance. They demonstrate how clinicians need to take into account the complex convergences between psychic and social reality in the clinical setting in order to help their patients understand the anxiety, fear, insecurity and anger caused by the complex relations of class and power. This examination of the psychodynamics of terror and aggression and the unconscious defences employed to deny reality offers powerful insights into the microscopic unconscious ways that ideology is enacted and lived.

Psychoanalysis, Class and Politics will be of interest to all mental health professionals interested in improving their understanding of the ideological factors that impede or facilitate critical and engaged citizenship. It has a valuable contribution to make to the psychoanalytic enterprise, as well as to related scholarly and professional disciplines.

chapter Chapter 2|22 pages

Money, love, and hate

Contradiction and paradox in psychoanalysis

chapter Chapter 4|16 pages

The manic society

chapter Chapter 6|15 pages

Class and splitting in the clinical setting

The ideological dance in the transference and countertransference

chapter Chapter 7|11 pages

Attacks on linking

The unconscious pull to dissociate individuals from their social context

chapter Chapter 10|13 pages

The beheading of America

Reclaiming our minds

chapter Chapter 12|29 pages

Is politics the last taboo in psychoanalysis?1

A roundtable discussion with Neil Altman, Jessica Benjamin, Ted Jacobs and Paul Wachtel. Moderated by Amanda Hirsch Geffner

chapter Chapter 13|7 pages

Response to roundtable

Something's gone missing

chapter Chapter 14|8 pages

Response to roundtable

Politics and/or/in/for psychoanalysis

chapter Chapter 15|7 pages

Response to roundtable

What dare we (not) do? Psychoanalysis: a voice in politics?

chapter Chapter 16|8 pages

Political identity

A personal postscript1