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Normalizing the Balkans

DOI link for Normalizing the Balkans

Normalizing the Balkans book

Geopolitics of Psychoanalysis and Psychiatry

Normalizing the Balkans

DOI link for Normalizing the Balkans

Normalizing the Balkans book

Geopolitics of Psychoanalysis and Psychiatry
ByDušan I. Bjelic
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2011
eBook Published 23 May 2016
Pub. location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315598543
Pages 200 pages
eBook ISBN 9781315598543
SubjectsBuilt Environment, Geography, Social Sciences
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Bjelic, D. (2011). Normalizing the Balkans. London: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315598543

Normalizing the Balkans argues that, following the historical patterns of colonial psychoanalysis and psychiatry in British India and French Africa as well as Nazi psychoanalysis and psychiatry, the psychoanalysis and psychiatry of the Balkans during the 1990s deployed the language of psychic normality to represent the space of the Other as insane geography and to justify its military, or its symbolic, takeover. Freud's self-analysis, influenced by his journeys through the Balkans, was a harbinger of orientalism as articulated by Said. However, whereas Said intended Orientalism to be a critique of the historical construction of the Orient by, and in relation to, the West, for Freud it constituted a medical and psychic truth. Freud’s self-orientalization became the structural foundation of psychoanalytic language, which had tragic consequences in the Balkans when a demonic conjunction developed between the ingrained self-orientalizing structure of psychoanalysis and the Balkans' own propensity for self-orientalization. In the 1990s, in the ex-Yugoslav cultural space, psychoanalytic language was used by the Serb psychiatrist-politicians Drs. RaÅ¡kovic and Karadzic as conceptual justification for inter-ethnic violence. Kristeva's discourse on abject geography and Zizek's conceptualization of the Balkans as the Real have done violence to the region in an intellectual register on behalf of universal subjectivity. Following Gramsci’s and Said’s 'discourse-geography' Bjelic transmutes the psychoanalytic topos of the imaginary geography of the Balkans into the geopolitics inherent in psychoanalytic language itself, and takes to task the practices of normalization that underpin the Balkans’ politics of madness.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|22 pages

Freud and the Balkans

chapter 2|16 pages

Freud and the Language of Power

chapter 3|17 pages

The Universal Subject and Colonial Geography

chapter 4|19 pages

Kristeva’s Exile from Balkan Madness

chapter 5|16 pages

Slavoj Žižek: Lacania and the Balkans’ Real

chapter 6|16 pages

Immigrants as the New Balkans

chapter 7|32 pages

Psychoanalysis, Psychiatry, and Insane Geographies

chapter 8|14 pages

From “Family Myth” to “Family Resemblances”

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