ABSTRACT

Psychoanalysis in the Barrios: Race, Class, and the Unconscious demonstrates that psychoanalytic principles can be applied successfully in disenfranchised Latino populations, refuting the misguided idea that psychoanalysis is an expensive luxury only for the wealthy.

As opposed to most Latin American countries, where psychoanalysis is seen as a practice tied to the promotion of social justice, in the United States psychoanalysis has been viewed as reserved for the well-to-do, assuming that poor people lack the "sophistication" that psychoanalysis requires, thus heeding invisible but no less rigid class boundaries. Challenging such discrimination, the authors testify to the efficacy of psychoanalysis in the barrios, upending the unfounded widespread belief that poor people are so consumed with the pressures of everyday survival that they only benefit from symptom-focused interventions. Sharing vivid vignettes of psychoanalytic treatments, this collection sheds light on the psychological complexities of life in the barrio that is often marked by poverty, migration, marginalization, and barriers of language, class, and race.

This interdisciplinary collection features essays by distinguished international scholars and clinicians. It represents a unique crossover that will appeal to readers in clinical practice, social work, counselling, anthropology, psychology, cultural and Latino studies, queer studies, urban studies, and sociology.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

section Section I|50 pages

Freud with a Spanish accent

chapter Chapter 1|17 pages

Freud and the Latin Americans

A forgotten relationship

chapter Chapter 2|16 pages

Psychoanalysts bearing witness

Trauma and memory in Latin America

chapter Chapter 3|15 pages

Dying to get out

Challenges in the treatment of Latin American migrants fleeing violent communities

section Section II|50 pages

Pathology of otherness

chapter Chapter 4|16 pages

The analyst as interpreter

Ataque de nervios, Puerto Rican syndrome, and the inexact interpretation

chapter Chapter 6|22 pages

Eating brains

Latinx barrios, psychoanalysis and neuroscience

section Section III|68 pages

The Latino queer body

chapter Chapter 7|21 pages

Visible pleasure and sex policing

State, science, and desire in twentieth-century Cuba

chapter Chapter 8|14 pages

Melancholia and the abject on Mango Street

Racialized narratives/psychoanalysis

chapter Chapter 9|15 pages

Chencha’s gait

Voice and nothing in Myrta Silva

chapter Chapter 10|16 pages

Beside oneself

Queer psychoanalysis and the aesthetics of Latinidad

section Section IV|49 pages

The clinical is political

chapter Chapter 12|18 pages

Treating borderline personality disorder in El Barrio

Integrating race and class into transference-focused psychotherapy