Journal article
Is Psychoanalysis Universal? Politics, Desire, and Law in Colonial Contexts
JB Rogers
Political Psychology | WILEY | Published : 2017
DOI: 10.1111/pops.12437
Abstract
Psychoanalysis has long been used as a tool to analyze the symptomology of individuals and nation states. But can it universally be applied to all? This article argues that psychoanalysis was born in the wake of the French Revolution as the subject of rights came to understand that it could make choices, but that these choices would not always be the right ones. In Douzinas’ () terms “every desire is a potential right” (p. 8), and this idea links desire to rights in a way that psychoanalytic theory and practice must contend. But it also offers the possibility that it is rights-bearing subjects who are specifically desiring in the manner that psychoanalysis proposes. In this article, I examin..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
I am grateful for many conversations on these ideas held in many countries with Mark McMillan, Adrian Little, and Paul Muldoon and particularly to Jaco Barnard-Naude for his intellectual camaraderie on this path. Funding for this research was provided by the Australian Research Council project DE120102304.