Saving the world one patient at a time: Psychoanalysis and social critique
Psychotherapy and Politics International, Vol. 7, No. 3, Pg. 190-205.
Jennifer Tolleson
In contrast to its revolutionary beginnings, the psychoanalytic
discourse has abandoned its potential as a critical, dissident force in
contemporary life. It is imperative, in our efforts to engage in
socially responsible clinical practice, that we restore the
sociocritical function to our professional mandate, and that we apply
such critique to our symbiosis with the dominant organizing social and
economic order. In our close encounter with the tragedies and
profundities of the human subject, we are uniquely poised to inhabit a
critical, dissident and ardent sensibility in relation to the larger
political world. Our immersion in human subjectivity makes possible a
vivid and poignant perspective on human experience in contemporary
life, and yet our valorization of the subjective and the individual,
and our difficulty looking beyond the dyad as the site of human
suffering and human transformation occludes a broader social and
historical inquiry. So, too, does our preoccupation with holding onto
our professional legitimacy, staying viable in the marketplace, which
tempts us in morally dubious directions and dampens our freedom to
elaborate a more oppositional, or dissident, sensibility. Arguably the
profession has a responsibility to make a contribution, practical and
discursive, clinical and theoretical, to human rights and social
justice. A contribution along these lines requires tremendous courage
as we push back against the gains afforded by our conformity to the
status quo.
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