ABSTRACT

Does suffering have meaning? The leading scholars and practitioners in Meaningless Suffering engage with this haunting human question through the lenses of psychoanalytic, phenomenological and ethical discourse, all the while holding contemporary social concerns in full view. 

The authors seek to find ways of speaking about the lived realities and historical moments that make up our social narratives – from the murder of George Floyd to the bird watching incident in Central Park – in order to render visible the entangled forms of the effects of embodiment, ideology, race, social practice, and intersectionality. Meaningless Suffering is bookended by powerful pieces by Mari Ruti and Homi K. Bhabha and, in the intervening chapters, the reader traverses the ideas of Augustine, Judith Butler, Fanon, Foucault, Freud, Gendlin, Heidegger, Lacan, Levinas, and Wittgenstein to pass through the realms of classical thought, affect theory, phenomenology, linguistic studies, relational psychoanalysis, somatic studies, intersubjectivity theory, gender studies, critical theory, and philosophical hermeneutics. 

This book is essential reading for postgraduate students, scholars, and practitioners working at the intersection of psychoanalysis, race, politics, and culture, as well as students of cultural studies, the humanities, politics, psychology, psychosocial studies, sociology, and social work.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

Problematizing “Meaningful Suffering”

chapter 1|25 pages

When the Cure Is that There Is No Cure

Melancholia, Mourning, Creativity

chapter 2|17 pages

Open Wounds of Racial Terror

The Elaine Race Massacre

chapter 3|6 pages

Reparation

Discussion of Roger Frie's “Open Wounds of Racial Terror: The Elaine Race Massacre”

chapter 4|16 pages

Ethical Labor

A Step Toward Reparations Within Psychoanalysis

chapter 7|21 pages

Confessions and Quantum Uncertainties

The Violence of Language, Organismic Cells, and the Incarnation of Words

chapter 8|23 pages

Anti-Black Racism in the Anthropocene

A Lacanian Reading of a Birder and a Dog-lover in Central Park

chapter 9|16 pages

Colonial Pathologies

Revisiting the Puerto Rican Syndrome

chapter 10|25 pages

White Panic and the Rhetoric of Exposure

Confronting the Uncanny in our New Racial Times

chapter 11|16 pages

Being-At-The-Intersections

Dwelling in Ambiguity, Vulnerability, and Responsibility

chapter 12|17 pages

On Approaching Race, Class, and the Unconscious 1

A Case Study of Ataque de Nervios

chapter 13|13 pages

An Intersectional Feminist Exploration of the Working Lives of Women During COVID-19

Approaching Dignified Work Through a Spirituality of Resistance Framework

chapter 14|8 pages

Traumatic Racism