ABSTRACT
Psy-sciences (psychology, psychiatry, psychoanalysis, pedagogy, criminology, special education, etc.) have been connected to politics in different ways since the early twentieth century. Here in twenty-two essays scholars address a variety of these intersections from a historical perspective.
The chapters include such diverse topics as the cultural history of psychoanalysis, the complicated relationship between psychoanalysis and the occult, and the struggles for dominance between the various schools of psychology. They show the ambivalent positions of the psy sciences in the dictatorships and authoritarian regimes of Nazi Germany, East European communism, Latin-American military dictatorships, and South African apartheid, revealing the crucial role of psychology in legitimating and normalizing these regimes.
The authors also discuss the ideological and political aspects of mental health and illness in Hungary, Germany, post-WW1 Transylvania, and Russia. Other chapters describe the attempt by critical psychology to understand the production of academic, therapeutic, and everyday psychological knowledge in the context of the power relations of modern capitalist societies.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part One|70 pages
Cultural Representations of Psychoanalysis in Personal and Social History
chapter |14 pages
Psychoanalysis in Representative Organs of the Hungarian Press between 1913 and 1939
chapter |26 pages
Alice Bálint at the Intersection of the Personal, the Professional, and the Political
part Two|56 pages
Ferenczi and Róheim Revisited
chapter |12 pages
Sándor Ferenczi's Epistemologies and Their Politics: On Utraquism and the Analogical Method
chapter |12 pages
“Tell Them That We Are Not Like Wild Kangaroos”: Géza Róheim and the (Fully) Human Primitive
part Three|102 pages
Psychoanalysis and Psy-Knowledge in Soft and Hard Dictatorships
chapter |14 pages
Psychoanalysis and Taking Sides: Two Moments in the History of the Psychoanalytic Movement
chapter |20 pages
The Social Roles and Positions of the Hungarian Psychologist-Intelligentsia between 1945 and the 1970s: A Case Study of Hungarian Child-Psychology
chapter |32 pages
Remembering the Reinstatement of Hungarian Psychology in the Kádár Era: Reconstructing Psychology through Interviews
part Four|82 pages
The Politics of Psychiatry: Bodies, Illnesses, and Mental Health
chapter |16 pages
The Hygiene of Everyday Life and the Politics of Turn-of-the-Century Psychiatric Expertise in Hungary
chapter |12 pages
Patients and Observers: Specific Data Collection Methods in an Interwar Transylvanian Hospital
chapter |14 pages
Contemporary Criticism and Defenses of Psychiatry's Moral-Medical Types in Light of Foucault's Lectures on the Abnormal
part Five|46 pages
Critical Psychology and the Epistemology of Psy-Knowledge
