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  • London : Bloomsbury Publishing (US)  (1)
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    London : Bloomsbury Academic | London : Bloomsbury Publishing (US)
    ISBN: 9798765104743
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (208 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed
    Year of publication: 2023
    Series Statement: Psychoanalytic Horizons
    Keywords: Antisemitism ; Psychoanalysis Moral and ethical aspects ; Racism ; Literary theory ; Psychoanalytical theory (Freudian psychology)
    Abstract: Psychoanalysis has not had a comfortable history in relation to "race" and racism, despite its origins in the Jewish lives of Freud and its other first-generation progenitors and the insistent pressure of antisemitism upon it. Indeed, the failure to fully address racism is a running sore in the psychoanalytic movement. This has begun to be remedied in recent years, but it is still the case that psychoanalysis struggles to incorporate antiracist perspectives and that this might be a reason why it has engaged relatively poorly with Black communities. Psychoanalysis may have been a "Jewish science" in a positive sense, but it has not fully leveraged this to become a truly antiracist one. In Antisemitism and Racism, Stephen Frosh, a leading figure in psychoanalytic studies, provides a psychoanalytically-informed examination of the relations between antisemitism and antiblack racism. Frosh's starting point is a claim that the Jewish origins and implications of psychoanalysis fuel its capacity to interrogate racism of all kinds. Indeed, the shared experience of exposure to different kinds of racism raises prospects for renewed alliances between Jewish and Black communities. Antisemitism and Racism ends with a chapter that asks psychoanalysis itself to respond to some of the challenges emerging from the Black Lives Matter and decolonial movements. At a time when division and prejudice are on the rise to an alarming degree, it is imperative that we examine, understand, and discuss the psychological roots of racism
    Description / Table of Contents: Acknowledgements Introduction 1. Psychoanalytic Judaism, Judaic Psychoanalysis 2. Promised Land or Permitted Land 3. Psychoanalysis as Decolonial Judaism 4. Primitivity and Violence: Traces of the Unconscious in Psychoanalysis 5. Racialized Exclusions, or 'Psychoanalysis Explains' 6. Whiteness with Jewishness 7. Being Ill at Ease 8. Psychoanalysis in the Wake Bibliography Index
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