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Call for Papers

"Psychoanalysis and Politics: Nationalism and the Body Politic"
Interdisciplinary Conference
Norwegian Psychoanalytical Society
Oslo (Norway)
25-27 March 2011

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We cannot, argued Gullestad in Plausible Prejudice (2006),
“understand the appeal of right-wing politics if we do not take into
account how this rhetoric is underpinned by and embedded in
rearticulated neo-ethnic ideas.” She argued that politicians from
other than the right-wing populist parties have resisted specific
ways of talking that are considered too extremist, rather than their
underlying frame of interpretation. Recent news stories appear to
lend support to her view: Civil rights campaigners have accused
governments, not just in France but across Europe, of adopting
anti-immigrant and anti-Roma policies to win popular support. The
issue of the so-called ‘Ground Zero mosque’ has caused agitation in
the US. The Sweden Democrats has been battling up in the recent
elections, appealing to hostility towards immigrants and Muslims in
particular, employing the slogan “Tradition and Security”. 

In relation to the Wolf-man’s phantasies, where the passive role he
had played towards his sister had been envisioned as reversed, Freud
(1914) wrote that they “corresponded exactly to the legends by means
of which a nation that has become great and proud tries to conceal
the insignificance and failure of its beginnings.” Given that we are
witnessing a revival of nationalist ideas, this conference poses the
question of what fantasies these give voice to. It encourages
thinking about the nature of the iconic images celebrated and to what
forms of violence and what losses are derealized within this
framework of interpretation. 

One might think in terms of ‘cultures of fear’ (Moïsi (2009) in
reference to recent developments in USA and Europe), of fantasies of
fusion or ‘imagined sameness’ (Gullestad). Alongside the image of the
nation as a mother and/or father, Reich (1933) called attention to
the fantasy of the nation as a body. This metaphor is echoed in
Money-Kyrle’s (1939) characterization of ‘group hypochondria’ in
connection with the burning of witches and heretics; “The Church, and
State united to it, could tolerate no foreign body within itself, and
turned ferociously upon any that it found.”

This is an interdisciplinary conference – we invite theoretical
contributions and historical, literary or clinical case studies on
these and related themes from philosophers, sociologists,
psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, literary theorists, historians and
others. Perspectives from different psychoanalytic schools will be
most welcome. Papers must not be previously published and must be
available for publication in the planned conference book.
Presentations are expected to take half an hour; another 30 minutes
is set aside for discussion.

Please send an abstract of 200 to 300 words to
<[email protected]> by December 10th
2010.

Confirmed speakers thus far include:

MEENAKSHIE VERMA, Anthropology EHESS, Paris, “Violence, Memory,
Amnesia and Propitiation: Anthropological Knowledge of Partition”

MARTYN HOUSDEN, Reader in Modern History, University of Bradford, UK,
“Erich Fromm on Politics And the Nation”

SVEIN TJELTA, Group Analyst/Clinical psychologist, Norway, “The
Making of the Iso-Type”

EARL HOPPER, Psychoanalyst, British Psychoanalytical Society, Group
Analyst, International Association of Group Psychotherapy,
“Traumatised Social Systems and the Basic assumption of Incohesion:
Aggregation/ Massification or (ba) I:A/M”

SZYMON WRÓBEL, Associate Professor, Inst. of Philosophy and Sociology,
Polish Academy of Sciences, Inst. for Interdisciplinary Studies,
University of Warsaw, “Populist Logic and the Concept of the
Political. The Case of Poland”

Organising Committee:

Lene Auestad, Research Fellow, Philosophy, University of Oslo/Centre
for Studies of the Holocaust and Religious Minorities/ currently
London.

Jonathan Davidoff, Psychologist and Postgraduate Student in
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy at the Tavistock Centre, London.

Karl Eldar Evang, Psychologist from the University of Oslo,
Psychoanalyst. Board member of the Norwegian Psychoanalytic Society.

Håvard Nilsen, Intellectual Historian from the University of Oslo.


Contact:

Hugh Galford, Marketing Director
Library of Social Science
Phone +1 718 393-1104
Email: [email protected]
Web:
http://www.libraryofsocialscience.com/cfps/cfp-2011_psychoanalys_politics.html
 
 
 
 
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