Events and Seminars
Event | : | Troubling Democracy and Decolonization |
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Venue | : | Online |
Date | : | 23/04/2025 |
Duration | : | 6 - 7:30pm BST |
Extra Info | : | Troubling Democracy and Decolonization: The Role of a Critical Psychoanalysis in Cultivating a Revolting Unconscious With Michael O’Loughlin The relationship between psychoanalysis and its Others is vexed and contentious. Jacques Derrida (1981) noted that psychoanalysis is a domain that privileges a European and North American worldview. Ranjana Khanna (2003), and Celia Brickman (2018) have offered incisive critiques of the inherent constitutiveness of psychoanalysis in colonialism, evident, for example, in the unexamined deployment of concepts such as ‘primitive;’ and ‘regression’ in psychoanalytic conceptualization. Attempts to conceptualize a decolonized clinic in psychoanalysis have exposed fissures that mirror the polarization of global political discourse in recent years. Considerable work has been done to understand ancestral and sociohistorical lineages and the catastrophic consequence of the severance of social linkages that results from displacements produced by wars, genocides, and forced migrations. Psychoanalytic theorists understand unmourned losses arising from colonial conquest as leading to racial and postcolonial melancholia (Khanna, 2003, Gilroy, 2005), often manifested clinically in what Abraham and Torok refer to as the demetaphorization of affect. Karima Lazali’s (2021) work in Algeria offers a case study of the kind of incorporation of totalizing ideology and intergenerationally transmitted trauma that leads to “a dispossession of subjectivity” and hence a prohibition on active citizenship and Suely Rolnik’s analysis of interpellation in Brazil raises the provocative question of an insurrectionary unconscious. This work, together with consideration of work by Piera Aulagnier, Judith Butler, and Achille Mbembe are helping form the outlines of a decolonizing practice of psychoanalysis in academia and in the clinic. |
Organised By | : | Psychoanalysis and Politics |
Web Link | : | https://www.psa-pol.org/crises/troubling-democracy-and-decolonization-the-role-of-a-critical-psychoanalysis-in-cultivating-a-revolting-unconscious/ |