DEADLY UNCONSCIOUS LOGICS IN JOSEPH HELLER’S CATCH-22
Catch-22 is a black comedy novel about death, about
what people do when faced with the daily likelihood of annihilation. For the
most part what they do is try to survive in any way they can. The book begins,
‘The island of Pianosa lies in the Mediterranean Sea eight miles south of Elba.’
That is the geographical location of the action. Much of the emotional plot of
the book turns on the question of who’s crazy, and I suggest that it is
illuminating to look at its world in Kleinian terms. The location of the story
in the inner world is the claustrum — a space inside the psychic anus, at
the bottom of the psychic digestive tract, where everyone lives perpetually in
projective identification, and the only value is survival. If one is expelled
from the claustrum, there are only two places to go: death or psychotic
breakdown (Meltzer, 1992). What people do in these circumstances is to erect
individual and institutional defences against the psychotic anxieties engendered
by unconscious phantasies of the threat of annihilation. These defences are
extreme, utterly selfish and survivalist.
In certain institutional settings they are erected against
death itself and correspond to what Joan Riviere called in her essay ‘On the
Genesis of Psychical Conflict in Early Infancy’ (1952), ‘the deepest source of
anxiety in human beings’ (1952, p. 43). She suggests ‘that such helplessness
against destructive forces within is ubiquitous and constitutes the greatest
psychical danger-situation known to the human organism...’ (ibid.). Isabel
Menzies Lyth argues that these anxieties are re-evoked in the work of nurses,
where death is present and imminent. ‘The objective situation confronting the
nurse bears a striking resemblance to the phantasy situations that exist in
every individual in the deepest and most primitive levels of the mind. The
intensity and complexity of the nurse’s anxieties are to be attributed primarily
to the peculiar capacity of the objective features of her work situation to
stimulate afresh these early situations and their accompanying emotions’ (Lyth,
1959, pp. 46-7). There are such nurses in the perverse world of Catch 22. They tend the Man in White, in plaster from head to toe, arms and legs encased
and extended. Those whose job it is to tend him routinely take the bottle of
plasma going in and the bottle of urine going out and change them round: there
is no difference between nourishment and waste, introjection and projection;
fair is foul and foul is fair.
Bion describes the church and the army as exemplary
organisations for embodying the pathology of group relations. Pianosa is an Army
Air Corps base, run by mad, ambitious officers, reeking of arrogance and
sycophancy, for whom success and failure are the only measures of worth (p. 262)
and survival is always at risk. Their survival in career terms is maintained at
the expense of the literal survival of the officers and enlisted men who lie
below them in the military hierarchy. The hierarchy includes General Dreedle,
who is astonished to learn that he cannot have anyone shot who irritates him
(pp. 218, 279), General Peckem, head of Special Services, who cares only for
bureaucratic power in the table of organisation and thinks it eminently rational
that combat operations should come under his domain - What could be more
special? Peckem outwits Dreedle; Dreedle torments his son-in-law, Colonel
Moodus, by dangling a sexy Wac before him (p. 213). Colonel Scheisskopf
outsmarts them all by getting promoted over their heads to Lt. General and is
free to indulge his passion: parades, including precision marching to the point
of tying the men’s arms so they won’t swing.
The men in the squadron are directly answerable to Colonel
Cathcart, who divides his fortunes into split extremes of ‘‘Feathers in My
Cap!!!!!’ and ‘Black Eyes!!!’ (p. 209; cf. p. 415) and whose sole preoccupation,
after survival and sycophancy, is getting his picture into the Saturday
Evening Post. His strategy is to raise the number of missions his men must
fly before being released from combat — from forty-five to seventy to eighty in
the course of the book, but he will gladly go on raising the number to 6000, if
that’s what it takes to impress the generals (p. 211). What all those in the
hierarchy do is to aspire. As Lt. Colonel Korn, Cathcart’s nemesis, puts it,
‘Everyone teaches us to aspire to higher things. A general is higher than a
colonel, and a colonel is higher than a lieutenant colonel. So we’re both
aspiring’ (p. 415).
The way to succeed is to humiliate, dominate and put down
others, an approach exquisitely exemplified in Captain Black’s perpetual
endeavours to get people to consume themselves with envy or, as he puts it, eat
their livers (pp. 110, 395). Persecution is rampant, the more pointless the
better, as are blackmail, intimidation, caprice and malice. The best persecution
of all is, of course, to endanger people to the point of death by raising the
number of missions. But, as Black shows, you can persecute people about
anything. Take the Glorious Loyalty Oath Crusade. People had to swear allegiance
and disclaim communism to get a knife, fork, spoon, food, but the main point was
not to allow Major Major to sign, so he could be ostracised. Black’s bile was
because Major Major had been made Squadron Commander when Black wanted to be. So
everyone had to suffer continuous harassment to indulge Black’s spite. It took
the fearsome authority of Major _____ de Coverly, a man whose one-eyed gaze
frightened all, so much so that none could ask his Christian name, to put an end
to the paranoid, frenzied excesses of the crusade (pp. 112-15).
Major Major only became a major because an IBM machine had ‘a
sense of humor almost as keen as his father’s’ (p. 85), whose sadism had killed
the boy’s mother and blighted his son’s life. Major Major Major was hated by all
for his nonconformity, which consisted of being good, polite and honourable and
following all the Christian virtues (p. 83). The effect of his experiences in
the military was to lead him to sign the name Washington Irving on all censored
letters, thus evoking an investigation by the CID which continues throughout the
novel and finally lands on an innocent and incompetent chaplain, who is as
undeserving of persecution as the major. Nevertheless, he is interrogated and
found guilty in a chapter reminiscent of Kafka’s The Trial (ch. 36).
Major Major also evolved the perfect strategy of command. He instructed his
orderly that all visitors should be told that he is in when he was out and out
when he was in. This approach almost always obviated administrative worries.
A commander who would not command was complemented by a
doctor who responded to all patients’ complaints by telling them his troubles.
Everyone who came to Doc Daneeka’s dispensary was dealt with by his orderlies,
Gus and Wes, who painted their gums purple with gentian violet. Doc Daneeka was
a decent man whose rise to financial security had been cruelly destroyed when he
was drafted, and he never tired of complaining about his financial losses. He
drew extra flight pay by getting himself signed onto the records when ever
McWatt flew, but this killed him when McWatt flew into mountainside for a reason
I’ll mention anon, and the inexorable paperwork declared him dead and it was
just too complicated to unscramble, not to mention too profitable for his wife.
So he became an un-person, one of a number who lived in the woods near the base
and did not officially exist.
This theme of bureaucracy being more real than flesh and
blood could have its compensations, as happened when the book’s hero, Yossarian,
moved the line on the map which showed the forward point of the allied troops so
as to make it unsafe to bomb Bologna, a notorious death trap because of flak. It
took a long time for the higher-ups to figure out that they were suffering from
the fallacy of misplaced concreteness: the line had been taken for the reality
so literally that when it was mischievously moved, the reality was thought to
have changed. Days of respite from the threat of death were gained.
The central moral conflict of the book lies in the
relationship between the system and its rules and the humanity which pays the
price for the defences of those in charge and the system they created and
maintain at the expense of human decency. This is the point of the book’s title.
Whenever you try to behave sensibly and look after yourself in a crazy world,
there’s a catch, a catch which has entered the language as a result of Heller’s
book. Catch-22 takes many forms, but the central one is that you don’t have to
fly any more missions if you’re crazy, but you have to ask first, and anyone who
wants to get out of combat duty isn’t crazy (p.46)
‘There was only one catch and that was catch 22, which
specified that a concern for one’s safety in the face of dangers that were real
and immediate was the process of a rational mind. Orr [Yossarian’s tent-mate and
a pilot who kept crashing and of whom more anon] was crazy and could be
grounded. All he had to do was ask; and as soon as he did, he would no longer be
crazy and would have to fly more missions. Orr would be crazy to fly more
missions and sane if he didn’t, but if he was sane he had to fly them. If he
flew them he was crazy and didn’t have to, but if he didn’t want to he was sane
and had to. Yossarian was moved very deeply by the absolute simplicity of this
clause of Catch-22 and let out a respectful whistle.
‘"That’s some catch, that Catch-22," he observed.
‘"It’s the best there is," Doc Daneeka agreed (p. 46).
Catch-22 appears at intervals throughout the book (e.g., pp.
104,172-3), but it is revealed most clearly in two incidents, the first when an
old Italian woman unpacks it to its essence when Yossarian asks her by what
right the Military Police chased all the girls away from the airman’s favourite
haunt: ‘Catch-22. Catch-22 says they have a right to do anything we can’t stop
them from doing’. The women had done nothing wrong but were still chased away.
When challenged the M.P.s kept saying ‘Catch-22’.
‘"They don’t have to show us Catch-22," the old woman
answered.
‘"The law says they don’t have to."
‘"What law says they don’t have to?"
‘"Catch-22"’ (p. 398).
Yossarian strode away, ‘cursing Catch-22 vehemently as he
descended the stairs, even though he knew there was no such thing. Catch-22 did
not exist, he was positive of that, but it made no difference. What did matter
was that everyone thought it existed, and that was much worse, for there was no
object or text to ridicule or refute, to accuse, criticise, attack, amend, hate,
revile, spit a, rip to shreds, trample upon or burn up’ (p. 400).
The final appearance of Catch-22 is when Yossarian finally
refuses to fly any more missions. He is hauled up before Colonels Cathcart and
Korn and told he will be court-martialled if he does not accept a deal they are
proposing. It looks lovely. They are going to promote him, give him another
medal and send him home as a hero to do morale-boosting campaigns and sell war
bonds. He’ll get what he has always wanted - out. They begin by telling him that
there’s a catch - Catch-22 - and go on for some time explaining what a
despicable deal it is, how self-serving for them, how betraying of his comrades.
But none of this is the essence. That’s the easiest part, they claim, but it’s
the one thing which he eventually finds he cannot do. They want him to like them
(p. 416).
At the heart of Catch-22 lies betrayal of decent values, the
requirement that one sell one’s soul to survive. The book turns on the axis of
hope and decency versus despair and cynicism. The logic of the system is what
the chaplain rightly calls ‘immoral logic’ (p. 380). Everyone gives in to it at
one point or another, except that the chaplain and Major Danby and Yossarian,
along with the women, retain some ability to think and try to live out decent
values. Yossarian puts it undramatically near the end: ‘I wouldn’t want to live
without strong misgivings’ (p. 441).
Yossarian is sometimes hysterical, as when he screams at
McWatt to take evasive action from German anti-aircraft flak after bombs away.
He even strangles him at one point. He also has ideas of reference. Since the
impersonal forms of persecution have such life-threatening effects, they might
as well - better - be seen as vendetta rather than anonymous (p. 170-71). But
for the most part he lives in the depressive position, for example, with
compassion for insensitive, boisterous new flyers. ‘And it wasn’t their fault
that they were courageous, confident and carefree. He would just have to be
patient with them until one or two were killed and the rest wounded, and then
they would all turn out okay’ (p. 343). He was also very clear about how very
mixed his motives were for refusing to fly any more missions, and he could
candidly admit that it didn’t make fully logical sense (p. 392). So, even though
he managed to live in the depressive position more than the others, he lost it
from time to time. Nevertheless, when they thought he was crazy he was usually
nothing of the sort, as his interview with the psychiatrist hilariously shows
(pp. 297-8). He admits to all the symptoms he is accused of having. He is unable
to adjust to the idea of war, has a morbid aversion to dying, suffers from
survival anxieties, is depressed by misery, humiliation, ignorance, slums,
violence, greed, crime, corruption. The list of symptoms covers a page, and
Yossarian - in touch with all this pathology - freely admits he is crazy in an
these ways (pp. 297-8). He was even obsessed by death and dreamed and daydreamed
about it (pp. 312, 339, 340). All of this is most ironic, since he was the
squadron’s most admired hero, was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for
going over Ferrera twice and destroying the target (p. 391), and many admired
him clandestinely for his final stand (pp. 393-4).
But there is much more to say about this twenty-eight year
old oddball bombardier, with a name that made Colonel Cathcart shudder and
create malicious free associations to it. He was truly alien to the heritage of
the Cathcarts, Peckems and Dreedles (p. 207). At various points it is made clear
that he is Adam, Pilgrim, Everyman. Indeed, he appears naked in a tree, watching
the burial of Snowden and says to the inquisitive Milo, ‘It’s the tree of
life... and of knowledge of good and evil, too’ (p. 257), just as he appears
nude on parade to receive his medal from General Dreedle, once again because of
his horror over the fate of Snowden.
Milo Minderbinder and Snowden (whose Christian name, like
those of most characters, we are never given) - are the other two main symbolic
figures in the novel. Milo does everything; Snowden does one: he dies. Milo is
pure opportunist, Snowden pure victim. Milo is the spirit of capitalism
incarnate, as well as the embodiment of its false consciousness, its confidence
tricks and its painted smiles. He sits beside Yossarian in the tree, o’erlooking
Snowden’s burial without comprehending anything, with a perfect surface
innocence, trying to persuade Yossarian of his patriotic duty to eat
chocolate-covered cotton (seeds and all), because Milo has unwisely cornered the
Egyptian cotton crop and has to get rid of it somehow. He is the exemplar of the
logic of capital and its amorality. If the vicissitudes of the market dictate
it, you remove the parachutes from your comrades’ planes, take the CO2 out of
their life preservers, remove the morphine from their first aid kits (pp. 426,
428) and bomb and strafe your own airfield, causing heavy casualties (pp. 210,
252-4). The strafing was in the contract. He didn’t start the war, after all;
he’s only trying to put it on a business-like basis. (p. 251). Noble mottoes are
painted over, and the logo of his M&M Enterprises replaces them. It’s all okay,
because the food is good and ‘everybody has a share’ (p. 228). I lost count of
the commodity deals he made - exotic spiders, chick-peas, unripened red bananas,
endive, mushrooms, artichokes, vanilla beans, cinnamon sticks, caraway seeds,
tangerines, cocoa (e.g., 226-7, 231, 248, 273, 365). In the process he becomes
Mayor of Palermo, Assistant Governor General of Malta, Vice-Shah of Oran and the
Sheikh of Araby (pp. 229-30, 232, 239). His credo, of course, is the worship of
supply and demand and ‘the right of free men to pay as much as they had to for
the things they needed in order to survive’ (p. 362). He began as a Uriah Heep
mess officer but became a huge dealer in everything, crossing all lines -
including the German lines - in the name of business. (One is reminded of the
role of the capitalists in ‘Oh, What a Lovely War!’) He was also a master of
hypocrisy: ‘Milo’s eyes were liquid with integrity, and his artless and
uncorrupted face was lustrous with a mixture of sweat and insect repellent’ (p.
251). Milo provides a perfect compliment to the unjust persecution of the
chaplain in the immediately preceding chapter where he and the colonels devise a
perfect rationalisation for his never having to fly combat missions, since his
deals are so important to the war effort. The consequence, of course, is that
someone else’s life will be put more at risk.
It is easy to recall Catch-22 (especially as refracted
through the film version) largely as black humour and to forget what a profound
morality it is. It could be said that the whole book is constructed around the
languid unravelling of the agony of Snowden’s death over Avignon, the final
description of which reminds one of the unbearable scene in the bomb crater in All Quiet on the Western
Front, where one soldier watches another die.
The story unfolds in small revelations throughout the text, and we are not
really clear about it until the penultimate chapter. The quality of these
passages is dream-like, and Snowden’s death is at the heart of Yossarian’s
relationship to the war. In early chapters we learn that Yossarian takes the war
very personally and insists that people are trying to kill him. This is an
enduring feature of his world view. In the sequel, Closing Time, the
narrator, reflecting on the events in Catch-22, recalls him as that crazy
bombardier who used to say that ‘he would rather die than be killed... and had
made up his mind to live forever, or at least die trying’ (Heller, 1993. p. 20). He also takes personally God’s creation of pain, phlegm, tooth decay, and
the incontinence of the old (p. 178). This brings to mind a similar passage in The Brothers
Karamazov, in which Ivan gives this sort of mundane,
gratuitous personal suffering as part of his reason for turning in his ticket to
God.
Indeed, this is one facet of ‘the secret Snowden had spilled
to him on the mission to Avignon - they were out to get him; and Snowden had
spilled it all over the back of the plane’ (pp. 170-71). In spite of his being
wounded, Yossarian’s most intimate experience of death is Snowden’s demise on
the way back from Avignon. At first it is thought that Yossarian has been hit
and people call though the intercom to help the bombardier. Yossarian asks many
questions about the war, but they all boil down to one ‘which had no answer’:
‘Where are the Snowdens of Yesteryear?’ (pp. 34-5). Snowden keeps saying he is
cold, and Yossarian does all he can to help by making him comfortable and
putting a tourniquet on the shrapnel wound in his leg. In one of the most
touching passages in the book we are with Yossarian when he finally discovers
that there is another wound. ‘Snowden was wounded inside his flak suit.
Yossarian ripped opened the snaps of Snowden’s flak suit and heard himself
scream wildly as Snowden’s insides slithered down to the floor in a soggy pile
and just kept dripping out. Another chunk of flak more than three inches big had
shot into his other side just underneath the arm and blasted all the way
thorough, drawing mottled quarts of Snowden along with it through the gigantic
hole in his ribs it made as it blasted out. Yossarian screamed a second time and
squeezed both hands over his eyes His teeth were chattering in horror. He forced
himself to look again. Here was God’s plenty all right, he thought bitterly as
he stared - liver, lungs, kidneys, ribs, stomach and bits of the stewed tomatoes
Snowden had eaten that day for lunch’ (429)
Snowden said again that he was cold, and Yossarian said again
‘There, there.’
‘Yossarian was cold, too, and shivering uncontrollably. He
felt goose pimples clacking all over him as he gazed down despondently at the
grim secret Snowden had spilled all over the messy floor. It was easy to read
the message in his entrails. Man was matter, that was Snowden’s secret. Drop him
out a window and he’ll fall. Set fire to him and he’ll burn. Bury him and he’ll
rot, like other kinds of garbage. The spirit gone, man is garbage. That was
Snowden’s secret. Ripeness was all’ (pp. 429-30).
There are two other passages written at this level of
rhetorical power. One conveys great tenderness and is about Yossarian’s loving
Nurse Duckett as they lie by the seaside. This flows into his reflections on
people who die under water, his missing friends and his first sight of a corpse,
and it ends with an account of the gratuitous death of Kid Sampson, as McWatt
buzzes the swimming raft and makes a tiny miscalculation ‘which slices the boy
half away’, followed by a sound, ‘tsst’, and the legs and hips toppled
backwards, and then it rained Kid Sampson on all of them (pp. 331-2). This is
but one of many deaths which take us completely by surprise. They appear in the
middle of a paragraph, sometimes in a subordinate clause, almost by the way, and
convey an awful contingency, a callousness of God, nature and human depravity.
Two of the most amusing minor characters - Nately and Hungry Joe - die in this
off-hand way. Similarly, the frat-man Aarfy rapes a woman and throws her out a
window, blandly, and gets away with it in the teeth of Yossarian’s shouting that
it is wrong, and he will be punished (p.409).
This comes at the end of a sustained walk through the streets
of Rome, where he sees tableau after tableau of cruelty, rape, gang rape,
beating of children and a dog (which reminds him of the beating of the horse in
Raskolnikov’s dream (p. 405), thus evoking the ubiquity of the theme of
pointless suffering and murder. There is a long passage on hypocrisy and the
perverse inversion of values: ‘What a lousy earth! ...How many winners were
losers, successes failures, rich men poor men? How many wise guys were stupid?
How many happy endings were unhappy endings? How many honest men were liars,
brave men cowards, loyal men traitors, how many sainted men were corrupt, how
many people in positions of trust had sold their souls to blackguards for petty
cash, how many had never had souls? How many straight-and-narrow paths were
crooked paths? How many best families were worst families and how many good
people were bad people? When you added them all up and then subtracted, you
might be left with only the children, and perhaps with Albert Einstein and an
old violinist or sculptor somewhere’ (p. 403). He is here at the brink of
cynicism, experiencing life as a nightmare, and is sorely in need of redemption:
‘The night was filled with horrors, and he thought he knew how Christ might have
felt as he walked through the world, like a psychiatrist through a ward full of
nuts, like a victim through a prison full of thieves. What a welcome sight a
leper must have been!’ (p. 405).
I have, of course, had in mind contemporary events as I have
written this essay. I have, that is, returned to Catch-22, because
present events in the world have revived the sense that wanton destructiveness
lies very near the surface of human nature and can break through at any time in
any place. In recent public discussions, the author has been heard to say that
now is a good time to be old, since it is so hard to maintain hope in the face
of the current manifestations of cruelty and the moral maze of the times. For
his generation the axis of good and evil had - or was thought to have - a single
fulcrum. Now the debate among competing goods and evils is bewildering and
easily leads to despair. This novel - one of the century’s greatest and one
whose subtleties I have only begun to convey - turns on what happens at the
intersection of character and the institutionalised reifications and cruelties
of debased societies and societies at war, internally and with nominally
external enemies. There is a fine line, a thin veneer, represented in the book
by Yossarian and the chaplain, Captain R. O. Shipman, one an Assyrian, the other
an Anabaptist. I take this to mean that Joseph Heller believes that insofar as
decency is being husbanded and cultured, it is not in the mainstream of the
society. This was undoubtedly true in the period when he was a young man in the
1930s and 1940s, as he recalled in a recent television interview: the left was
marginalised but had morality on its side.
The line between integrity and selling out and entering the
morass of moral relativism is easily crossed. When they had the chaplain
cornered, he dreamed up a disease for himself. He lied. ‘The chaplain had
sinned, and it was good. Common sense told him that telling lies and defecting
from duty were sins. On the other hand, everyone knew that sin was evil and that
no good could come from evil. But he did feel good; he felt positively
marvellous. Consequently, it followed logically that telling lies and defecting
from duty could not be sins. The chaplain had mastered, in a moment of divine
intuition, the handy technique of protective rationalization, and he was
exhilarated by his discovery. It was miraculous. It was almost no trick at all,
he saw, to turn vice into virtue and slander into truth, impotence into
abstinence, arrogance into humility, plunder into philanthropy, thievery into
honor, blasphemy into wisdom, brutality into patriotism, and sadism into
justice. Anybody could do it; it required no brains at all. It merely required
no character’ (p. 356). Hannah Arendt has essayed soberly on the most alarming
point about this in her study of Eichmann in Jerusalem, subtitled A
Report on the Banality of Evil (1963). I wonder how she would have responded
to the Kleinian psychoanalytic notions of the ubiquity of psychotic anxieties
and the idea of the inhumanity of groups and bureaucracies as an institutional
defence against them (Bion, 1961; Jaques, 1955; Lyth, 1959; Young, 1992, in
press).
Yossarian bears it all, contains it all and lives a life
ruled by psychotic anxieties, and in defence against the terror of
disintegration, all the rules make group relations sense, i.e., they are mad. He
and his tentmate Orr survive - he through psychical distress and insight and
knowing when to stand and when to run (p. 440), Orr through rigorous training in
physical hardship, won through repeated crashes, the cunning point of which
Yossarian only grasps at the very end when Orr turns out to have rowed all the
way to Sweden and freedom. Unlike my other two favourite anti-authoritarian hard
cases - Randle McMurtry of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and Cool Hand
Luke - Yossarian stops short of provoking the system into destroying him. He
knows when to take off on his own path to redemption - ‘to split’ in the
depressive sense.
It is ultimately a book about ideals, about the
paranoid-schizoid and depressive positions and about how hard it is for people
to behave well, especially in groups and institutions under duress. ‘That’s my
trouble, you know,’ Yossarian mused sympathetically, folding his arms. ‘Between
me and every ideal I always find Scheisskopfs, Peckems, Korns and Cathcarts. And
that sort of changes the ideal.’
‘You must try not to think of them,’ Major Danby advised
affirmatively, ‘And you must never let them change your values. Ideals are good,
but people are sometimes not so good. You must try to look up at the big
picture.’
Yossarian rejected the advice with a sceptical shake of his
head. ‘When I look up, I see people cashing in. I don’t see heaven or saints or
angels. I see people cashing in on every decent impulse and every human
tragedy.’ (435)
...‘From now on I’m thinking only of me.’
‘But Yossarian, suppose everyone felt that way.’
‘Then I’d be a damned fool to feel any other way, wouldn’t
I?’ (p. 436, cf. pp. 58, 102)
Paper presented to seventh annual conference on
Psychoanalysis and the Public Sphere: ‘Losing and Finding Values’, University of
East London, November 1993.
REFERENCES
(Place of Publication is London unless otherwise specified.)
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Heller, Joseph (1962) Catch-22. Cape.
______ (1993) ‘Work in Progress’, Observer Magazine 22
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______ (in press) Mental Space. Free Association
Books.
This article will appear in The Psychoanalytic Review.
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