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Robert M. Young Online Writings
PSYCHOANALYSIS AND THE OTHER: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND RACISM
by Robert M. Young
Psychoanalysis is not, for the most part, a medical resource in this
country. There are only about three hundred psychoanalysts trained at the Institute of
Psychoanalysis who practice in Britain, and, at the outside, about twenty-five hundred
psychoanalytic psychotherapists. There are precious few Consultant Psychotherapists in the
National Health Service - a hundred max, probably nearer sixty and most of those
half-time. Practically speaking, they dont do psychoanalysis in their Health Service
time; they supervise colleagues and trainees. They dont do it much, either,
except as part of their training and in a tiny number of specialised institutions, for
example, the Cassel Hospital and the Tavistock Clinic. It has recently been estimated that
at the present rate of training, about one per cent of the population will be served by
psychotherapy - almost all of that private. Since over 90% of analysts and therapists live
in the Southeast, this area will get 4% coverage and reach about a third of the need as
estimated from presenting symptoms in general practice surgeries, with the consequence
that a minuscule fraction of the need will be met in the rest of the country (Hinshelwood,
1985, pp. 14-15).
In the light of these figures, I trust you will agree that it cannot be
claimed that psychoanalysis is a heavy hegemonic weight on ethnic minorities. Indeed, in
the catchment area where I trained there was one Consultant Psychotherapist for three
quarters of a million people. The population was significantly of Asian and Afro-Caribbean
origin, and the take-up rate was very low, indeed, so low that a research project was
devoted to finding out why. What was discovered - you wont be amazed to hear - was
that there were important cultural reasons why these people did not approach the
Psychotherapy Department, even though they had the same sorts of needs as other people in
Southall and environs. Most important among the reasons given was a clash of world views
or cosmologies between the ethnic communities and the presumed way of conceiving things of
the therapists, as well as the very activity of psychotherapy, which flew in the face of
the cultural practices and beliefs about solving problems in families, not talking to
people outside ones own culture, and other forms of alienation which are fairly
obvious (Ilahi, 1988). The result of all this and other fairly obvious cultural
differences is that when members ethnic minorities are treated for psychological
difficulties they are significantly more likely to be diagnosed as psychotic, to be
sectioned and to be given drugs (Littlewood and Lipsedge, 1989).
I would like to be able to say that if there were lots more
psychoanalysts and psychotherapists, this situation would improve dramatically, but, as
things stand, I dont believe it would. There are a number of reasons for this.
First, there is not a significant move to get more people from ethnic minorities to train
- partly for economic reasons but largely for cultural ones. The ones who do train are,
regrettably, often devoted to assimilation, at least as far as their addresses and
clienteles are concerned. Next, the curricula of trainings make no gesture at all to
cultural differences, either in the guise of pluralism or that of cultural specificities.
There is little enough written in the field of cross-cultural psychology and therapy, and
what exists is not part of the training curricula of the institutions known to me (Roland,
1988; McGoldrick et al., 1982). The theories taught in psychoanalytic and
psychotherapeutic trainings are universalist and make no gesture to culture and society.
Moreover, due to the social and cultural location of most practitioners, there is little
incentive to think about racism or to do research. A single exception, unsurprisingly, in
the light of the number of Jews in the field, is the Holocaust and its aftermath where
important work has been done (Faimberg, 1988).
To complete this bleak picture, orthodox psychoanalysis in Europe,
America and most of the world is very busy being deferential to the models of science as
applied to the mind that progressive critiques are busy questioning in this conference and
throughout the world. Orthodox Freudianism positively reeks of sweat from those who
prostrate themselves in the name of mental forces, structures, energies and adaptations.
You would not believe the lengths to which they go to drain the humanity out of
psychoanalytic theory. There are even systematising treatises which reduce it all to a
semi-axiomatic form (Rapaport and Gill, 1959; Rapaport, 1960).
There is, however, a gleam of light on the horizon in the humanistic
tradition that grew up in the British Psycho-Analytic Society, which never subordinated
itself to the medical model and which has been developing among Kleinians and members of
the Independent Group since the 1920s and has flourished since the 1940s. Although these
psychoanalysts are not innocent of scientific and biological concepts, they are more
concerned to tell a good story and to find a way of expressing the primitive, unconscious
forces which account for our most puzzling and distressing behaviour as individuals and in
groups and institutions In particular, Kleinian psychoanalysis offers us the concepts of
psychotic anxiety and projective identification to illuminate our most elemental forms of
anxiety and defences against them. These, along with associated concepts such as the
paranoid-schizoid and depressive positions and the analysis of culture in terms of
transitional objects and phenomena, seem to me to offer tremendously useful tools for
understanding how our fellow humans can be experienced as Other. I shall now make use of
some of these concepts in a case study, a psychohistorical account of racism in the
Americas.
It is surely appropriate that since the date of this conference falls
so close to the five hundredth anniversary of Columbus Day we should look at the racism of
the New World. It is a sombre story, so distressing that it has attracted the attention of
Ridley Scott, the director most able to plumb the dark side of human nature. The creator
of Blade Runner, an analysis of the boundaries of humanity and
Alien, the embodiment of Thanatos now brings Gérard Depardieu to us as
Columbus and promotes Sigourney Weaver from Warrant Officer Ripley to Queen Isabella in
his new film, 1492, appropriately subtitled Conquest of Paradise.
The plight of the Native American 'Indian' has been dreadful from the
moment of the so-called 'discovery' of America. Colonialism and racism were integrally
related from the start and decimated red and black and then other peoples. In an excellent
two-part essay on Columbus and the Origins of Racism in the Americas, Jan
Carew writes, 'Modern colonialism, which began with the European rediscovery of the
Americas de-civilised vast areas of the world. It began with a holocaust against Native
Americans, twelve million of whom died in the first forty years of the Colombian era,
continued against Africans, two hundred million of whom were estimated to have died in the
Atlantic slave trade, and then there were countless deaths of Asian peoples as colonialism
gained momentum' (Carew, 1988a, p.38). These figures do not include the march West of the
American Frontier, which completed the devastation of the Native American way of life.
This has been called the longest undeclared war in history, and its scale is
unprecedented.
Learned Catholic theologians decreed in 1503 that the permission of
Queen Isabella should be given for slavery in the New World. A degraded view of the
natives was a prerequisite for this. Paradoxically and hypocritically, so was a promise of
salvation. She wrote, 'Being as they are hardened in their hard habits of idolatry and
cannibalism, it was agreed that I should issue this decree... I hereby give licence and
permission... to capture them... paying us the share that belongs to us, and to sell them
and utilise their services, without incurring any penalty thereby, because if the
Christians bring them to these lands and make use of their service, they will be more
easily converted and attracted to our Holy Faith' (ibid., p. 48).
The European charge of cannibalism was unfounded. Harmless and helpful
natives were bad-mouthed as wild and bestial, thus legitimating the activities of a master
race. The savagery of the conquistadors was projected onto their victims, who could then
be seen as subhuman and could be treated in subhuman ways - which they extravagantly were.
Indeed, as Robert Berkhofer has shown in The White Mans Indian (1978), there
is a continuous history of images of the American Indian from Columbus to the present
which consisted of extravagant representations which were patently projections of split
off and disowned parts of the colonialists. Over two thousand cultures and even more
societies were reduced to a single misapplied term - Indios - and subjected to
ongoing stereotypes which were updated as colonial need dictated (Berkhofer, 1979, p 3).
Columbus spoke of them in admiring terms as gentle and generous (p. 6), but this
didnt last, and by the sixteenth century they were routinely depicted as liars,
deceivers and thieves as their master the divell teaches them (p. 19).
The carnage which ensued in the Columbian era was chronicled by a
contemporary observer, Bartolomé de Las Casas, who observed that the Indians 'had a
greater disposition towards civility than the European people', yet it was 'upon such
people that the Spaniards fell as tigers, wolves and lions fall upon lambs and kids. Forty
years they ranged those lands, massacring the wretched Indians until in the land of
Espanola, which in 1492 had a population estimated at three millions of people, scarcely
three hundred Indians remained to be counted. The history of Espanola is the history of
Cuba, San Juan [Puerto Rico], and Jamaica. Thirty islands in the neighbourhood of San Juan
were entirely depopulated. On the side of the continent, kingdom after kingdom was
desolated, tribe after tribe exterminated. Twelve millions of Indians in those continental
lands perished under the barbarous handling of the Spaniards. Their property was no more
secure than their lives. For greed of gold, ornaments were torn from neck and ear, and as
the masked burglar threatens his victim until he reveals the hiding-place of this store,
the Indians were subjected to the most cruel tortures to compel the disclosure of mines
which never existed and the location of gold in streams and fields in which the Almighty
has never planted it. Obedience secured no better treatment than sullenness, faithful
service no better reward than that which followed treachery. The meanest Spaniard might
violate the family of the most exalted chief, and home had no sanctity in the bestial eyes
of the soldier. The courtiers rode proudly through the streets of the New Isabella, their
horses terrifying the poor Indians while their riders shook their plumed heads and waved
their glistening swords. As they rode along, their lances were passed into women and
children, and no greater pastime was practised by them then wagering as to a cavalier's
ability to completely cleave a man with one dextrous blow of his sword. A score would fall
before one would drop in the divided parts essential to winning the wager. No card or dice
afforded equal sport. Another knight from Spain must sever his victim's head from the
shoulder at the first sweep of his sword. Fortunes were lost on the ability of a swordsman
to run an Indian through the body at a designated spot. Children were snatched from their
mother's arms and dashed against the rocks as they passed. Other children they threw into
the water that the mothers might witness their drowning struggles. Babes were snatched
from their mothers' breasts, and a brave Spaniard's strength was tested by his ability to
tear an infant into two pieces by pulling apart its tiny legs. And the pieces of the babe
were then given to the hounds that in their hunting they might be the more eager to catch
their prey. The pedigree of a Spanish bloodhound had nothing prouder in its record than
the credit of half a thousand dead or mangled Indians. Some natives they hung on gibbets,
and it was their reverential custom to gather at a time sufficient victims to hang
thirteen in a row, and thus piously to commemorate Christ and the Twelve Apostles. Moloch
must have been in the skies... I have been an eye-witness of all these cruelties, and an
infinite number of others which I pass over in silence' (quoted in Carew, 1988a, pp.
48-9).
Las Casas gives his account island by island, and in practically every
case friendly overtures on the part of the natives were repaid with decimation. It was
only in the wake of this that the natives became hostile. But even then we find a long
history of honourable negotiations and treaties, cynically broken and overturned, as Dee
Browns account in Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (1978) chronicles. Consequently,
the condition of the Indian scarcely improved in the centuries subsequent to the
sixteenth, and in the nineteenth century the Americans all but completed their
extermination, only to wreak upon them another humiliation in the twentieth century in
making dime novel and the film western vehicles for symbolising the onward march of the
white man's Frontier and the trials of American manhood. Once again, they treated the
Noble Savage as wholly ignoble and rapacious, thoroughly deserving
diabolisation at the hands of endless paperback cowboys and cinematic John Waynes which
echoed, in long marches to alien reservations and at the massacre at Wounded Knee (which
wreaked revenge for Custer's Last Stand at the Little Big Horn), the behaviour of the
Spaniards chronicled by Las Casas three centuries earlier (Slatta, 1990, ch. 12; Buscombe,
1988; Las Casas, 1552).
In the wake of physical slaughter, there has been cultural denigration.
Offensive terms have found their way into common parlance. For example, the word
redskin is derived from bounty hunters who found it burdensome to bring in
whole bodies. They were allowed to flay their victims and deliver their bloody skins in
order to receive $60 for a mans and $40 for a womans. Similarly, Indian names
- including Redskins, Indians and Braves - are attached to white sports teams, whose
cheerleaders and fans dress up in ways that offend the Native Americans and reduce their
heritage to foolish garb and frenetic caricatures of war dances.
There have been a few films which have sought to redress this
historical injustice, for example, 'Broken Arrow' (1950), which made a stand against
racism by portraying the hero, James Stewart, as sympathetic to the Indians. He lived
among them and married one. (It is no accident that the scriptwriter, Albert Maltz, was
jailed for refusing to testify to his political affiliations before the McCarthyite,
witch-hunting House Un-American Activities Committee. Maltz was blacklisted for his
communist beliefs, so a friend put his name to the script, which won many prizes.) In
'Hombre' (1966), Paul Newman's Indian values, hard as they are, are seen to show up the
hypocrisy of those who were supposed to care for Indians on reservations but who
ruthlessly stole food and supplies from them. More recently, Kevin Cosner's 'Dances with
Wolves' (1991) provides homage to Native American culture, albeit at the expense of making
the white soldiers into wooden baddies, even though the reality would have been bad
enough. There is an irony in the number of Oscars the picture won, for the film
perpetuates the split and presents its mirror image.
The connection between the Indians portrayed in Dances with
Wolves and their present-day descendants is spelled out in an article about the
film: 'Imagine you were a Native American, living on a reservation in Shannon County,
South Dakota where a century ago, your forbears were mown down by the Seventh Cavalry at
Wounded Knee. Firstly, you would be poor. Really ground down by poverty. Your place would
be on the bottom-most rung of the richest nation in the world. Blacks in Harlem slums and
Mississippi shanties would be better off than you. You would have had a substandard
education. You would be unlikely to have a job because your race faces a 75 per cent
unemployment rate. Much of your meagre welfare benefit probably goes on gambling and
drink. Your children are likely to be born crippled because their mother is an alcoholic.
Life expectancy would be below 50, the lowest in the United States' (Perry, 199l, p. 19).
Indeed, life expectancy of an Indian on a reservation is even lower - 45 years. Alcoholism
is the commonest cause of death, and Indians have the highest infant mortality,
unemployment and rate of drop-out from education of any group in America. The suicide rate
is twice the national average, and one sixth of Indian teenagers have attempted suicide.
The first appearance of the term 'race' in the English language
occurred in 1508 and linked it with unconscious forces. It appeared in a poem on the seven
deadly sins by a Scot named Dunbar who referred to those who followed envy as including
'bakbyttaris of sindry recis' (backbiters of sundry races (Banton, 1987, p. 1). If we look
at treatises on racism, we find them full of very primitive, Kleinian language. Here is a
list of terms I have extracted from a book on the psychoanalysis of racism which stresses
the projection of intrapsychic phenomena into the political and treats them largely in
terms of diseased or malignant internal objects: foreign bodies, germs, pollutants,
contaminants, malignancies, poisonous infections, gangrenous limbs, dirty, suppurating,
verminous (Koenigsberg, 1977). This brings to mind the representation of Jews as gutter
rats in Nazi propaganda films and the rhetoric of competing political tendencies discussed
by Martin Thom in an article on projection in left sectarian rhetoric, in which opponents
were characterised as shitty, nauseating and their ideas as spew, vomit, etc. (Thom,
l978).
At a seminar I gave on racism, I read out the long passage by Las Casas
which described in excruciating detail the genocide of the conquistadors. A colleague who
irritatingly tends to split off compassion from sharp insight said, I can see why
you are upset, but why are you surprised? Thats what happens in the unconscious. The
question is what allows it to get acted out. He was right, of course. That is the
whole point of Freuds essay, Civilization and Its Discontents (1930) and of
his theory of civilization. Man is a wolf to other men (Freud, 1930, p. 111),
and civilization is a thin veneer which, through taboos and sanctions keeps human
destructiveness from erupting even more often than it does (see Gay, 1988, pp. 543-53).
What allows it to get acted out at the supra-familial level is outgrouping, which is most
devastating in racism and virulent nationalism. Thats not quite adequate, however,
since Freuds account makes no distinction between the intrapsychic, the family and
groups of different sizes. I think he is partly right and partly badly in need of some
social thinkers and historians to help him out of his swingeing reductionism. Freuds
model begins with the rapaciousness and polymorphous perversity of the of the patriarch.
This evokes the creation of civilization by means of the incest taboo, which leads to the
Oedipus complex which, in turn, gives us the superego - our only hope when primitive urges
are upon us.
What happens in racism and nationalism is that we give our superegos
over to the leader, the organisation or group or gang or nation or the cause.
The leaders then sanction destructive acting out and selectively remove the veneer of
civilisation. As the Indian cultist puts it in Gunga Din (1939), we kill
for the love of Kali. We kill in the name of a cause, often a putatively pure cause.
This is captured perfectly in that ghastly phase of the moment - ethnic
cleansing. It is easy to make a long and distressing list of situations in which
some version of that rationalisation was or is operative. My son recently made a
television documentary about Yugoslavia during and after the Second World War. The
Croatians set up a fascist republic. During its reign soldiers would go up to children and
get them to make the sign of the cross. If they made it in the Russian Orthodox way they
were shot then and there. At the end of the war the leaders of the fascist group were
protected and smuggled abroad by the Vatican. The priest who organised this escape route
later became Pope. The documentary has not been shown in any Catholic country and cannot
be re-shown here. It says to me that the church and the military are tied for first place
in sanctioning genocide in the name of a higher cause.
Similar events come to mind - Kampuchea, the Holocaust, the Armenian
massacre, Adjarbajanis, Gypsies, the Irish, Palestinians, Kurds, the Crusades, the
Inquisition, the sweep of Islam across North Africa and as far as southern Spain. But by
far the largest persecution and decimation of one set of humans by another extends from
1492 to the present - a continuous policy as Brian Moser has shown in his three-part
documentary. It was all done in the name of a civilising mission and under the banner of
various versions of Christianity, whether it be Catholicism, Puritanism or even the Church
of the racist Latter Day Saints, finding the tablets in upstate New York and trekking to
Utah (echoes of the civilising mission of Dutch Christians in Southern Africa).
What on earth can psychoanalysis say to this amalgam of religion and
horror? Not a lot but something. First, it asks us to look steadily at the fact that it is
intrinsic to human nature and has occurred thoughout history. Some historians want to
confine racism to the capitalist era, but I dont think it will wash. Read your Bible. Second, psychoanalysis teaches us that the forces involved are very primitive, indeed, and
deeply sedimented. I think it is a particularly helpful contribution of Kleininanism that
we see that the mechanism of projective identification takes us back to the cradle,
where Klein describes phantasies which perfectly reflect the behaviours of the soldiers
described above. She says that projective identification is the prototype of all
aggressive object relations (1946, p. 8). Her depictions of these aggressive
phantasies involves tearing, biting, gouging, destroying, forcible entry, decimation,
exploding. These onslaughts are oral-sadistic and are conducted by all sadistic
means (p. 2). The phantasies are paranoid because they are persecutory and schizoid
because fears and feelings about the self are split off and projected into the Other -
initially the mother/breast and later to outgroups.
Klein was not particularly interested in groups, but her point of view
has been developed by Wilfred Bion, Elliott Jaques, Isabel Menzies Lyth, Bob Hinshelwood
and David Armstrong, among others, to show that the psychotic anxieties described by Klein
are active in all groups and that defences against them lead to the setting up of group
and institutional structures which protect the individual from feeling overwhelmed by
anxieties of annihilation. Indeed, the most renowned study in this tradition sought to
illuminate why nurses, who presumably began their trainings with a strong motive of
compassion and service, turn out to act unkindly and unimaginatively in the grip of
hospital routines. The author, Isabel Menzies Lyth has finally figured out why the nurse
wakes you up to give you your sleeping pill (Menzies Lyth, 1959). It seems to me, as it
did to Bion (1955, pp 456-57, 475-76), that we need to supplement Freuds reliance on
id, ego and superego and his analysis of the Oedipal dynamics of the family. What we need
to supplement this level with is the ongoing role of psychotic anxieties and
defences against them as the key that can unlock the door of racism and virulent
nationalism. Freuds analysis did not go deeply enough. I also think his analysis of
group psychology did not sufficiently take account of the sheer craziness of what gets
projected. Finally, he had no theory of socialisation (Young, forthcoming, ch. 2).
I think that the price of admission into a culture is the acquiring of
its projective identifications (Young, 1992). That is why racism is historically and
culturally contingent. It is quite specific in its utilisation of scapegoating and
stereotyping. To understand a particular form of racism is to bring together
psychoanalytic understanding with social, cultural and economic history - quite precisely.
The profile of a given racist is shaped by his or her cultures history and economic
relations. To become a white American, with the rarest exceptions, is to become a racist.
To become a member of the dominant group in any nation on that continent - North, Central,
South - is to acquire racist attitudes toward the indigenous population of Indians. Once
the conquistadors and colonialists had secured their beachhead, the history of North
America is one of successive waves of immigrants, each and every one of which has been met
with racist attitudes and discriminatory barriers: Germans, French, Italians, Irish, Jews,
Poles and other Central and Eastern Europeans, Chinese, Japanese, Latin Americans,
Vietnamese, Koreans, Cubans and - above all and most virulently - blacks. As the
percentage of people whose first language is Spanish has grown to a majority in many urban
centres, blacks remain the most hated people. Yet they are the people most often entrusted
with maternal roles with respect to the children of the dominant population, a situation
which also applies in Southern Africa: still needing and still attacking the breast.
Of course, as serious historians have shown, each of these waves of
immigration and denigration is central to the story of European conquest. This is obvious
with respect to slavery and its aftermath. The stereotyping and scapegoating which are
integral to racism are based on economic relationships. Indeed, the
immigrants/Jews/blacks, in various improbable alliances and at various times, are thought
to be responsible for the economic woes of the rest of the population, and they
are raping our women. There were 4000 recorded incidents of lynching - often in groups
- in the decades after the South was left economically decimated by the American Civil
War, the conflict of all in history which took the highest percentage of lives on both
sides.
In Killers of the Dream, Lillian Smith offers a fantasy bargain
between the rich owner and the white redneck (sunburned from working with
heads bowed down in the cotton fields). Let us exploit you, and we will give you the black
to dominate, scapegoat, sexually exploit and murder. Mr. Rich White said to Mr. Poor
White, If you ever get restless when you dont have a job or your roof leaks,
or the children look puny and shoulder blades stick out more than natural, all you need to
do is remember youre a sight better off than the black man... But if you get nervous
sometimes anyway, and dont have much to do, and begin to get worried up inside and
mad with folks, and you think itll make you feel a little better to lynch a nigger
occasionally, thats OK by me, too; and Ill fix it with the sheriff and the
judge and the court and the newspapers so you wont have any trouble afterwards... If
you once let yourself believe hes human, then youd have to admit youd
done things to him you cant admit youve done to a human. Youd have to
know youd done things that God would send you to hell for doing... And sometimes it
was like this: You just hated him. Hated and dreaded and feared him, for you could never
forget, there was no way to forget, what youd done to his women and to those
womens children; there was no way of forgetting your dreams of those women... No way
of forgetting...Yes... they thought they had a good bargain (Smith, 1950, pp.
162-65). Once again, we are racist along lines laid down by economic and social
stratifications. Thats what makes it racism - stereotyping and scapegoating of
people as members of groups, rather than treating people as individuals.
Where I grew up in Texas in the 1950s, the Ku Klux Klan was still
active as it is again. I unknowingly worked with members - sharecroppers whose farms were
uneconomic and who had gone to work in a Ford factory in order to hold onto their homes.
They seemed decent people until one of them saw me in friendly conversation with a black
janitor, a preacher with a Masters Degree who was trying to keep his church going, a
situation parallel to the sharecroppers. The man who worked most closely with me carefully
lowering car bodies onto chassis said, Dont never speak to me again. I
dont want to have nothing to do with no nigger-lover. And he never uttered
another word to me.
These people, like racists everywhere, acquired their horrid social
attitudes by a process of tacit social learning, whereby their infantile psychotic
anxieties, feelings all babies have, got channelled into particular channels. I do not
think that those rednecks working at the Ford factory were mad or psychopathic, any more
than I think my racist father and (rather more genteel) racist mother and sister were
evil. As Hannah Arendt has shown us in the case of Adolf Eichmann, it is more banal than
that (Arendt, 1963). They were just socialised into the values of that part of the world -
just as I was. Otherwise, how could so many young Irishmen, Serbians, Croatians, Kurds,
Turks, Germans, Japanese, Russians, Afghans, Conquistadors kill and maim all those men,
women and babies? What is horrible about racism is that it is normal in the cultures where
it is sedimented.
That does not make it any less wrong or evil. It just means that we
will not root it out by means of superficial activities like Racial Awareness Training and
appeals to universal human values of civility. What is needed is the reimposition of the
veneer of civilisation - sanctions, rules and incarceration to back up moral injunctions.
Beyond that, we must address the psychotic anxieties at work in our dealings with one
another. One of the closest students of the role of these anxieties, Elliott Jaques, draws
very cautionary conclusions. He points out the conservative - even reactionary -
consequences of our psychotic anxieties and our group and institutional defences against
them. He suggests that as a result of these reflections on human nature 'it may become
more clear why social change is so difficult to achieve, and why many social problems are
so intractable. From the point of view here elaborated, changes in social relationships
and procedures call for a restructuring of relationships at the phantasy level, with a
consequent demand upon individuals to accept and tolerate changes in their existing
patterns of defences against psychotic anxiety. Effective social change is likely to
require analysis of the common anxieties and unconscious collusions underlying the social
defences determining phantasy social relationships' (Jaques, 1955, p. 498).
Primitive, psychotic anxieties, splitting, projective
identification, scapegoating, stereotyping - all in particular cultures at particular
points in history, leading to particular profiles of racism with particular anxieties to
be patiently unpicked in a context of the sanctions of morality, civility, law and order.
The harder the times, the harder this is to contemplate, much less undertake, much less
change. The abolitionist medallion posed the question, Am I not a man and a
brother? Primitive anxietys answer is that you cannot be a brother as long as
I am so afraid of annihilation and not afraid enough of retributiuon if I give way to my
baser, defensive reactions and split off my unwanted parts and put them into you.
This paper was delivered to a conference on Cultural Identity and
Medicine: Medical Practice in Contemporary Britain, held at St. Anthonys
College, Oxford, 8 May 1993. It is partially derived from a chapter entitled
Projective Space: The Racial Other in Mental Space, to be published by
Free Association Books.
Text 5290 words
REFERENCES
(I have included some useful references which are not cited in the text. Place of
publication is London unless otherwise specified.)
Anderson, B. (1983) Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin
and Spread of Nationalism. Verso.
Anthias, F. (1990) 'Race and class revisited - conceptualising race and
racisms', Sociol. Rev. 38: 19-43.
Arendt, Hannah (1963) Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. N. Y.: Viking Penguin; revised and enlarged, 1965; reprinted Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1977.
Banton, M. (1987) Racial Theories. Cambridge.
Berkhofer, R. F., Jr. (1978) The White Man's Indian: Images of the American Indian
Indian from Columbus to the Present. N. Y.: Knopf; reprinted N. Y.: Vintage Books,
1979.
Bernal, M. (1987) Black Athena: The Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilisation.
Vol. 1: The Fabrication of Ancient Greece 1785-1985. Free Association Books.
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Address for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Rd., London N7 9RQ
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
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