ABSTRACT

In our post-9/11 environment, our sense of relative security and stability as privileged subjects living in the heart of Empire has been profoundly shaken. Hollander explores the forces that have brought us to this critical juncture, analyzing the role played by the neoliberal economic paradigm and conservative political agenda that emerged in the West over the past four decades with devastating consequences for the hemisphere's citizens. Narrative testimonies of progressive U.S. and Latin American psychoanalysts illuminate the psychological meanings of living under authoritarian political conditions and show how a psychoanalysis "beyond the couch" contributes to social struggles on behalf of human rights and redistributive justice. By interrogating themes related to the mutual effects of social power and ideology, large group dynamics and unconscious fantasies, affects and defenses, Hollander encourages reflections about our experience as social/psychological subjects.

chapter Chapter 1|32 pages

Scared stiff

Social trauma and the post–9/11 political culture

chapter Chapter 2|28 pages

Political culture and psychoanalysis in the Southern Cone

Coming attractions of the Dirty Wars

chapter Chapter 3|30 pages

A psychoanalysis for tumultuous times

The psyche and social revolution

chapter Chapter 4|30 pages

The psychosocial dynamics of state terror

chapter Chapter 5|36 pages

The culture of fear and social trauma

chapter Chapter 6|34 pages

Exile

Paradoxes of loss and creativity

chapter Chapter 7|34 pages

Neoliberal democracy in Latin America

Impunity and economic meltdown

chapter Chapter 8|40 pages

U.S. neoliberal/neoconservative democracy

Psychoanalysis without the couch

chapter Chapter 9|36 pages

Impunity and resistance

Saving democracy in the heart of empire

chapter Chapter 10|46 pages

The future's uprooted minds