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Robert M. Young Online Writings
DISAPPOINTMENT, STOICISM AND THE FUTURE OF PSYCHOANALYSIS AND
THE PUBLIC SPHERE
by Robert M. Young
Abstract: Having looked back over the contributions I and others
have made to this conference over the last decade, I want to reflect on the gap between
what we hoped to do and where we find ourselves ten years on. One of the words I hear most
often from people of my political generation is 'disappointment', which has its good side,
since it means that one has not lost touch with the vision of the sixties. We have seen a
lot of dreams shattered and don't have a friend who feels at ease, but we have, hopefully,
gained a huge new tool of insight: containment, which leads to trying to work in the
depressive position rather that exclusively with splits. I also reflect on stoicism as the
personal and political stance appropriate to containment.
I note that many of us, including me, are now professors, heads of
programmes, editors of book series, in short, insiders, where we were (but only relatively
speaking) outsiders then. What price have we paid, and in what spirit have we accommodated
to the existing - nay, changed for the worse - order of society? I reflect on what we can
now hope to sustain and perhaps expand, including some thoughts about access to new means
of disseminating and institutionalising progressive ideas and practices, including
distance learning, email forums, Internet Relay Chat and the world wide web.
I have not found it easy to compose this short talk. This is partly
because I am the only person who has been on the planning committee of this conference
since the beginning, and I am sad and regretful that I am now stepping down, even though I
am sure that it is the right thing to do. It is not easy partly because I want to tell the
truth but am not sure I can find it in myself or out there. I then find myself having good
reasons (which may emerge in due course) for being tactful on behalf of values and
projects which are more dear to me than complete candour on this occasion. And yet that
sort of reticence is one of the things I most want to criticise.
Some of you will know and others will not that this conference was
conceived more than a decade ago in the context of a number of new initiatives which
contributed to a sense of a more creative space in the culture of psychoanalysis, in
particular, the development of programmes in psychoanalytic studies at the then North East
London Polytechnic, under the guidance of Mike Rustin and Barry Richards; Free
Associations journal (involving most of the people who originated the conference) and
Free Associations Books (involving Karl Figlio, Les Levidow, and me); the Freud Museum;
and very soon after these conferences got going: the Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies at
Kent (avowedly inspired by our work) and THERIP, the Higher Education Network for Teaching
and Research in Psychoanalysis. It seemed as if a relatively sclerotic psychoanalytic
establishment could be challenged and opened out to a more exploratory political and
cultural perspective from an alliance among these new initiatives, none of which was
beholden to any established psychoanalytic institutions or viewpoints.
The University of East London now has the largest undergraduate
programme in the country which is rooted in the psychoanalytic perspective, and their MA
in Psychoanalytic Studies, taught jointly with the Tavistock Clinic, is the best of the
dozen or so such MAs in the British Isles, while the Centre for Psychotherapeutic Studies
at Sheffield has built up in a small number of years the largest and most diverse
postgraduate psychoanalytic programme anywhere. Free Association Books has brought out
about three hundred volumes. In addition to the journal Free Associations there is
a new American one, Journal for the Psychoanalysis of Culture and Society, a new
electronic journal called Psychoanalytic Studies (soon to appear in hard copy, as
well), another on Human Relations, Authority and Justice, Mike Rustin now
co-edits Soundings, devoted to re-thinking left perspectives. Psychotherapy
trainings are affiliating themselves with universities at a fair rate, thereby increasing
the likelihood that they will no longer be run by small, inward-looking and conservative
cliques which are properly accountable to no one.
Mike Rustin, Paul Hoggett, Barry Richards, Andrew Samuels, Andrew
Cooper and I are professors, and we are involved in thriving and innovative programmes.
Karl Figlio heads up a new and exciting programme at Essex (where Bob Hinshelwood and Joan
Raphael-Leff were last week appointed to job share a new professorship). Margot Waddell
heads a thriving doctoral programme at the Tavistock, where she also edits a new book
series to be published by Duckworth. A goodly number of us has published one or more
books, while papers presented to this conference have found their way into a number of
collections and many journals. I know of more than half a dozen email forums on the
internet which grew directly out of this conference and related initiatives and of as many
web sites.
I said Id mention new means of disseminating and
institutionalising progressive ideas and practices, including distance learning, email
forums, Internet Relay Chat and the world wide web. I have prepared a little document
about this. What we do here and in our academic courses can and should be propagated
world-wide by distance learning and on the internet. Three will begin from Sheffield in
January. There are also many dozens of email discussion forums which are independent of us
and which centre on our concerns. You and any number of people can hold a seminar or
meeting all in the same internet room by the use of IRC, internet relay chat
(I mean simultaneously). The world wide web is a place for low-cost electronic journal
publishing and for posting writings for discussion with ones colleagues. It is a
hugely facilitating environment, and I hope youll join in as soon as you can. We
have been slow to make use of it. This conference has its own web site where I put Mike
Rustin and Andrew Coopers position paper from last year, along with other writings,
and no one from the conference has yet commented, but its not too late. Ill
put his and my papers from today there, along with any others which people would like to
let me have.
So why am I disappointed? That word came to me as something to think
about rather than just feel in one of the group sessions at a Public Sphere
Conference a couple of years ago, when some one I admire said, quite simply, that his main
problem was dealing with disappointment. That one sentence provided me with an immediate
and almost overwhelming centre for many of my disparate feelings. Mark you, disappointment
is not despair, and I even think one can feel deeply fulfilled yet disappointed (you may
wish to disabuse me of this fragile alliance of feelings). Quite soon after that a book
turned up by Ian Craib (1994), the title of which is The Importance of Disappointment. I
knew of events in the lives of both of the people dwelling on that term which could
justify the word, but they also meant something about the times, in particular, about the
snares and delusions of idealisation, the toll of growing older without ones dreams
coming to fruition. Craibs notion of disappointment turns out to be something like
the Kleinian notion of the depressive position.
I could but wont tell you about my own quite personal
disappointments. In the public domain, however, I will mention some. Free Association
Books was stolen from me, morally, if not legally, and no longer has a radical agenda. It
has dropped the motto of which I was so proud, which Joel Kovel urged me to adopt from
The Communist Manifesto: an association in which the free development of
each is the condition of the free development of all. I carry on at a much reduced
level of output under the imprint of Process Press, the motto of which is drawn from the
reflections of the last moments before being purged of comrade Rubashov in Arthur
Koestlers Darkness at Noon (1940). You may or may not know that the
character Rubashov was based on Nicolai Bukharin, meant to be a decent Bolshevik, and that
Koestler was hated by the official left for telling the truth about Stalinism. The motto
is: only purity of means can justify the ends. I chose it in a spirit of
comment on my erstwhile colleagues at FAB and on the whole history of belief that the
means justify the ends.
I bought back the Free Associations journal from the new
owners of Free Association Books but, rather like the New Left Review, its board
has ceased to meet. The staff of the Freud Museum found themselves under fire from their
orthodox governors but have managed to pursue a remarkably radical agenda while having to
be extraordinarily financially creative in order to make ends meet. The programme at Kent
fell under a shadow because of how its student and staff were being treated, and it is
unlikely to be allowed to expand. THERIP has become centred in Lacanianism, and people of
other persuasions have drifted away. It is sad that these organisations turn out not to be
as independent as they were thought to be a decade ago and that they never managed very
much co-operation. Indeed, the co-operation between the University of East London and Free
Associations journal which has kept this conference going is a notable exception to
the general rule.
I have also been saddened by the fact that, on the whole,
psychoanalysts and people from the Tavistock Clinic have drifted away from our annual
conferences. In short, it would be difficult to argue that those of us who considered
ourselves to be on the side of the angels are behaving or faring much better than those we
criticise. I could easily spend the remainder of my time illustrating this point with
anecdotes about people who attend or have attended this conference over the years,
including, of course, myself, members of the organising group of this conference and
people with whom I have worked in other contexts. In particular, I have seen in university
life forms of timidity, ruthlessness and beggar-my-neighbour as bad as any I have seen in
commercial life. In particular, I have seen appointments committees turn their noses up at
distinguished candidates with remarkable academic credentials and appoint safer ones with
less original minds.
When I entered the subculture of psychotherapy I have to admit that in
spite of all my academic work showing that there is no value-free knowledge or practice, I
believed that it would, at last, provide me with a haven from sectarianism and horrid
behaviour. I thought that my professional life as a psychotherapist would be just me and
my patients. If I had not managed to change the world, like many
ex-would-be-revolutionaries, I might at least hope to shift something significant in
myself and some of my patients. You will smile at my naiveté. It was soon apparent that
one had to get trained and that having got trained (which involved many political and
personal compromises), one had to get referrals and that one was in an organisation which
was a member of the United Kingdom Council for Psychotherapy (UKCP), then withdrawn, then
of the British Confederation of Psychotherapists (BCP), dominated by the Institute of
Psycho-analysis. Arguing that the organisation should rejoin the UKCP led to three votes
to do so, carried by clear majorities, yet the powers that be simply ignored the votes and
lobbied the students and members so that a fourth vote went the other way. This
occurred in an artificial atmosphere, since successfully challenged, that in the end we
would have to choose between these two bodies.
I am not here going to go into why I advocate the UKCP as the right
home for leftists and democrats and why I believe the BCP to be unacceptably elitist and
undemocratic (I have done so in Young, 1996a). My point for the present is a broader and
simpler one: being a psychotherapist is no haven from politics, including particularly
undermining and manipulative politics undermining because those in charge are at
the same time assessing ones inner world to see if one is suitable to be qualified
and to receive referrals. It is no wonder that some trainees of a nominally radical frame
of mind have kept out of this ongoing debate and have had their careers prosper partly as
a consequence of keeping their heads down. Others, having completed their trainings, have
thrown themselves into the arms of the governors of the caste system. I am thinking, in
particular, of two sometime Trotskyists of my acquaintance.
This brings me to my disappointment in the subculture of
psychoanalysis, broadly conceived. It is highly balkanised and operates a well-structured
caste system. I have seen people move from independent to deferential, by which I mean
from resisting kow-towing to the British Psychoanalytical Society to being deferential to
it, something which I note can happen during second analysis with Institute members. This
involves an interesting notion of maturation; I think it is better described
as adjustment and a species of realism.
But stay: there is a perfectly coherent position which says that one
has to choose ones battlefields and fight for what one can. There are positions
involving noblesse oblige, whereby one foregoes certain perquisites of elitism on
behalf of the wider society and a better world. One such is to stay in and work for the
National Health Service or other institutions in the public sector. Another is to teach in
an institution which is less high up the pecking order or further away from Hampstead and
Oxbridge than one might otherwise be. The University of East London is at the bottom of
the list of all British universities in the qualifications on entry of its students, yet
it has some impressive scholars and programmes. The University of Sheffield is not only in
the North, it is in Sheffield, where the air is the most polluted in the country, yet it
has the largest psychoanalytic centre. Bulgaria, where I am engaged with others in trying
to change the mental health services from Pavlovian and incarcerating to psychodynamic and
facilitating, has the least attractive and most menacing capital city of any country I
have visited, yet some of the worlds most eminent group relations consultants are
working there.
I think that such vocational choices are admirable, or relatively so.
However, I also think they are a long way away from the politics which brought me to
psychoanalysis and to this conference and related activities. The difference is that I
belong to a political tradition which says that the process constrains the result:
hence the name of my press. It is here that I think we have backslid remarkably from the
politics of the libertarian left. I know that there are others who will say that we should
worry less about how we work together. I have even heard it said that the great
efflorescence of admirable psychoanalytic work which has come out of the Tavistock and the
Institute of Psychoanalysis can perhaps be partially attributed to their stable
hierarchies. I would reply that I admire that work but that none of it except
perhaps some by Bion touches centrally on the social, cultural and political work
which is needed to save the world. Paul Hoggetts (1992) does, but my list
doesnt get much longer, and it is notable that he is only now signing up for the
more respectable psychoanalytic road and has so far not been embraced by the institutions
he has approached at the centre of the existing power structure. I am suggesting that we
have to carry on and maintain this independent space. It is precious and means a lot to
people outside this room, as well.
I promised to say something about containment, stoicism and the future.
I think the biggest lesson we learned from the aftermath of the politics of the sixties
was profoundly anti-Reichian. De-repression is not enough; as Marcuse showed, it only
produces repressive desublimation, ersatz freedom. The concept of containment developed by
Bion from Kleins ideas is central to a way forward, but we have not yet learned
clearly to distinguish containment from conformism. We need to evolve containing ways of
being rebellious and subversive. To say this is not easy is an understatement. In order to
rebel, it still seems to me that one has to enter the paranoid-schizoid position, to
exploit splits, to take sides, to be, as they say in parliamentary politics, in
opposition. Not to do so means that ones efforts to change the status quo are always vulnerable to seeing the other persons point of view too clearly and/or
to co-optive pathologisation, a technique which has been in rampant use in recent
political disagreements in training organisations and in the profession more widely. I
have heard many lose their political radicalism as a by-product of a good
analysis.
I wonder if there is a position in addition to Kleins
paranoid-schizoid and depressive ones and Steiners stuck, sometimes paralytic,
pathological organisation. I am advocating something like the notion of the ego ideal in
practice, which is the psychodynamic equivalent of Trotskys notion of
permanent revolution or Maos slogan that even in a march of ten
thousand miles one still has to take the first step or Rudi Dutschkes idea of
realistic [subversive] fantasies. I do know that once one has become a
reformer or agitator or rebel or subversive, it is very difficult to re-enter the
depressive position without selling out. Those of us who try to change things find
ourselves moving from being thought mad (usually called paranoid or demonising or
diabolising by a complacent power elite) to a painful re-entry whereby we swallow what we
know and bear conventional reality as stoics. The Roman Stoics usually withdrew from
public life, comforting themselves that they had the right moral approach, whether or not
they could act on it. If they found themselves in an impossible situation, suicide was an
honourable way out. Indeed, Marcus Aurelius opened his veins in a warm bath. I would like
to find a resolution short of that but have yet to do so. In moments of near-despair, I
sometimes wonder if all we have achieved with our chairs, departments, programmes,
publications and internet sites is what the conservative Italian sociologist, Vilfredo
Pareto, called the circulation of elites. On a good day I feel we have done
more, but thats a precarious feeling.
This talk has been low on concrete policies. I believe that these can
only be conceived and fought for from within a clear psycho-political perspective,
something which it is hellishly hard to conceive and hold onto in the absence of a
subculture, if not a movement, of leftist mental health workers and teachers. Each of you
will have his or her own programme. Mine includes getting more psychoanalysis into
undergraduate teaching; getting more therapy, including short-term analytic therapy, into
the NHS; training more clinical psychologists and counsellors psychodynamically;
increasing black and other minority representation in the psyche professions; and building
bridges between psychotherapy and the policy of care in the community (guided,
I propose, by the thinking of Peter Barham: 1984, 1992; Barham and Hayward, 1991). On the
theoretical front, debates about gender identity, sexuality and deviant or non-conformist
sexualities seem to me to be important and unresolved issues (see, for example,
OConnor and Ryan, 1993). The concepts of perversion and of perverse ethics preoccupy
me at the moment (Young, 1994, 1996).
I continue to believe that in the beginning was the value not
the word, not the fact and that all institutions, theories and practices are embodied
politics. I believe that this series of conferences, broad church though it is, is
founded on the vision of integrating progressive politics with psychodynamic approaches to
human nature, psychotherapy, groups, institutions, culture and society. We are some little
way into achieving this integration, but we have a long way to go. My motto on the
internet is from Albert Camus essay The Myth of Sisyphus: One must
imagine Sisyphus happy. When I dont want to be identified as an academic I use
a secondary signature. Its motto is this: Citizen to biker: Just what are you
rebelling against? Brando replies, Whadaya got? Im still working
on moving beyond those as my most hopeful slogans, and I hope youll continue to bear
with me.
Revised version of a paper presented in the keynote debate of the Tenth
Annual Conference on Psychoanalysis and the Public Sphere: The State Psychoanalysis
is In, University of East London 22 November 1996.
REFERENCES
Barham, Peter (1984) Schizophrenia and Human Value. Oxford:
Blackwell; reprinted Free Association Books, 1993
______ (1992) Closing the Asylum: The Mental Patient in Modern Society. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
______ and Hayward, Robert (1991) From the Mental Patient to the Person. Routledge; reissued as Relocating Madness: Free Association Books, 1985.
Craib, Ian (1994) The Importance of Disappointment. Routledge.
Hoggett, Paul (1992) Partisans in an Uncertain World: The
Psychoanalysis of Engagement. Free Association Books.
Koestler, Arthur (1940) Darkness at Noon. Cape; reprinted
Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1947, etc.
OConnor, Noreen and Ryan, Joanna (1993) Wild Desires and
Mistaken Identities: Lesbianism and Psychoanalysis. Virago.
Young, Robert (1994) New Ideas about the Oedipus Complex, Melanie
Klein and Object Relations. 12 (no. 2): 1-20, 1994.
______ (1996) Is "Perversion" Obsolete?, Psychology
in Society no. 21: 5-26.
______ (1996a)The Culture of British Psychoanalysis and related Essays on Character
and Morality and The Psychodynamics of Psychoanalytic Organizations. Process Press (in
press).
© The Author
Address for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Road, London N7 9RQ
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
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