ABSTRACT

Psychoanalysis has not examined violence as such since it is a sociological and criminological concept; psychoanalysis is concerned with speech. On Psychoanalysis and Violence brings together noted Lacanian psychoanalysts and scholars to fill an important gap in psychoanalytic scholarship that addresses what the contributors term the "angwash" of our current time.

Today violence is everywhere. We are inundated with it, exhausted by it, bombarded by images and reports of it on a daily, even hourly basis. This book examines how psychoanalysis can account for the many manifestations of violence in contemporary society. Drawing on a broadly Lacanian perspective, the authors explore violence in war, terrorism, how the media portrays violence, violent video games, questions of identity, difference and the ‘other’; violence narratives and violence and DSM, and explain how to account for how violence arises and the effect it has on us on both an individual and social level. These are just some of the daily social realities of the present day whose aggression are felt by everyone, which horrify us and which we often feel powerless to change. The contributors have therefore coined a term for this cultural malaise: "angwash", arguing that we are awash in angoisse or anxiety, in a constant panic regarding the impossible and contradictory demands of a "civilization" in crisis.

On Psychoanalysis and Violence will be of great interest to Lacanian psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|11 pages

Political philosophy in Freud

The death drive and the critical faculty 1

chapter 4|13 pages

The sex in their violence

Eroticizing biopower

chapter 5|15 pages

Lone wolf terrorists

Howling in the eye of the wind: the case of Adam Lanza

chapter 6|14 pages

The tortured child

chapter 7|17 pages

Click and destroy

The clinic of video games 1

chapter 8|12 pages

Violence in repetition

chapter 10|9 pages

How to measure what

Notes on universals and particulars

chapter 11|11 pages

From violence to aggressiveness

chapter 12|16 pages

Why the zombies ate my neighbors

Whither ambivalence?

chapter 13|18 pages

Susan stern: Sham

chapter 14|15 pages

Breaking the spell of the slave revolt in morality

From the subreption of identity-indifference to the repetition of the paraconsistent

chapter 15|7 pages

Terror and the unconscious

Psychoanalysis in Argentina, 1976–1983