Special Issue on PERVERSION, American Imago

IF 0.1 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Andrea Celenza, Murray M. Schwartz
{"title":"Special Issue on PERVERSION, American Imago","authors":"Andrea Celenza, Murray M. Schwartz","doi":"10.1353/aim.2023.a918103","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> Special Issue on PERVERSION, <em>American Imago</em> <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Andrea Celenza (bio) and Murray M. Schwartz (bio) </li> </ul> <h2>Introduction</h2> <p>Psychoanalysis as a body of knowledge has always encompassed contested areas; some of these concepts and ideas are deemed controversial yet remain within our lexicon, while others are discarded or become taboo. The topic (or even the word) perversion is one such vexed subject—pathologizing in tone and connotation, with outdated referents that arouse enormous anxiety and even hostility.</p> <p>This is not without reason or merit. Historically, the term has been used in ways that have harmed certain subgroups (homosexuals being the most flagrantly harmed group) to very real exclusionary and damaging effects. Despite a complete reversal in recent years, the damage (and guilt) remains palpable and the mere utterance of the word perversion can rankle and alienate. Hence, for some psychoanalytic practitioners, the term has become forbidden territory, and those who dare to even think it are judged immoral, while others make use of it, but often without being explicit about its parameters.</p> <p>At least aspirationally, we are not an industry that traffics in moralism and judgmentalism. We judge (as part of thinking) but do not <em>pre</em>-judge, and we do not value judgment<em>alism</em>—that being a proclivity to view others absent compassion, empathy, and understanding. We aspire to openness and free communication of even hateful feelings and thoughts. Our unconscious houses the full range of human potentiality, for good or ill. Doesn't free association promote the expression of destructive forces that live in our psyche so that the naming of such can lead to greater understanding? In this vein, does naming have to be pathologizing in such a way that harms rather than facilitates understanding? The relevance of these questions varies around <strong>[End Page 627]</strong> the psychoanalytic world. Some analysts use the term perversion freely, while others, especially in North America, revile it.</p> <p>Perhaps it would be helpful to begin by defining basic psychoanalytic ideals and goals that surround and embed—indeed, are definitional of—mental health. Psychoanalysis is a process with implicit assumptions about what it means to grow and flourish in ways that are healthy and expansive. What are the elements that make up such a mind and life? Though we do not legislate ways of being or instruct our patients about the choices they should make, we promote a <em>process</em> that engenders <em>mentally healthy capacities</em>, ways of being toward oneself and others that are mutually vitalizing and constructive. To cultivate these capacities is to expand the range of choices for our patients. Among these are the capacity to experience the full range of feelings, to construct meaning of one's life, to heal splits and fragmented parts of the self, and to cultivate a multiplicity of self-states, with flexibility among them. We strive toward an integration of multiple self-states (even if never achieved) and eschew binary or inflexible (either/or) ways of being. In terms of sexuality, a contemporary assumption focuses on inherent psychic bi- or multi-sexuality, a fluidity and flexibility in terms of sexual functioning and sexual experience. This does not necessitate a living out of such fluidity, but refers to the <em>psychic acceptance</em> of a multiplicity of racialized, ethnic, gendered, and sexual identities, a <em>multiplicity in potential</em>, so to speak. (Some of these identities will be metaphoric, while others have roots in concrete reality.)</p> <p>All of these capacities lead to greater inner strength, affective resonance, frustration tolerance, empathic capacity, and, inevitably, wisdom. We do not teach these capacities but cultivate them, exploring defensive inhibitions and fragmentations in the process. How our patients make use of these capacities is ultimately up to them.</p> <p>In these ways, the strivings of psychoanalytic processes are not conceived at behavioral or physiological levels, but rather as immersed in a process with metaphysical, psychological, and emotional goals. It is the inner life where we train our attention and embed ourselves—in the development of capacities that liberate our patients from behavioral or other psychic <strong>[End Page 628]</strong> constraints. Though these aspirations will have physiological substrates that can be linked to behavioral manifestations, they do not differentiate the perverse from the non-perverse at psychological or emotional levels.</p> <p>Therefore, we...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":44377,"journal":{"name":"AMERICAN IMAGO","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"AMERICAN IMAGO","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/aim.2023.a918103","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Special Issue on PERVERSION, American Imago
  • Andrea Celenza (bio) and Murray M. Schwartz (bio)

Introduction

Psychoanalysis as a body of knowledge has always encompassed contested areas; some of these concepts and ideas are deemed controversial yet remain within our lexicon, while others are discarded or become taboo. The topic (or even the word) perversion is one such vexed subject—pathologizing in tone and connotation, with outdated referents that arouse enormous anxiety and even hostility.

This is not without reason or merit. Historically, the term has been used in ways that have harmed certain subgroups (homosexuals being the most flagrantly harmed group) to very real exclusionary and damaging effects. Despite a complete reversal in recent years, the damage (and guilt) remains palpable and the mere utterance of the word perversion can rankle and alienate. Hence, for some psychoanalytic practitioners, the term has become forbidden territory, and those who dare to even think it are judged immoral, while others make use of it, but often without being explicit about its parameters.

At least aspirationally, we are not an industry that traffics in moralism and judgmentalism. We judge (as part of thinking) but do not pre-judge, and we do not value judgmentalism—that being a proclivity to view others absent compassion, empathy, and understanding. We aspire to openness and free communication of even hateful feelings and thoughts. Our unconscious houses the full range of human potentiality, for good or ill. Doesn't free association promote the expression of destructive forces that live in our psyche so that the naming of such can lead to greater understanding? In this vein, does naming have to be pathologizing in such a way that harms rather than facilitates understanding? The relevance of these questions varies around [End Page 627] the psychoanalytic world. Some analysts use the term perversion freely, while others, especially in North America, revile it.

Perhaps it would be helpful to begin by defining basic psychoanalytic ideals and goals that surround and embed—indeed, are definitional of—mental health. Psychoanalysis is a process with implicit assumptions about what it means to grow and flourish in ways that are healthy and expansive. What are the elements that make up such a mind and life? Though we do not legislate ways of being or instruct our patients about the choices they should make, we promote a process that engenders mentally healthy capacities, ways of being toward oneself and others that are mutually vitalizing and constructive. To cultivate these capacities is to expand the range of choices for our patients. Among these are the capacity to experience the full range of feelings, to construct meaning of one's life, to heal splits and fragmented parts of the self, and to cultivate a multiplicity of self-states, with flexibility among them. We strive toward an integration of multiple self-states (even if never achieved) and eschew binary or inflexible (either/or) ways of being. In terms of sexuality, a contemporary assumption focuses on inherent psychic bi- or multi-sexuality, a fluidity and flexibility in terms of sexual functioning and sexual experience. This does not necessitate a living out of such fluidity, but refers to the psychic acceptance of a multiplicity of racialized, ethnic, gendered, and sexual identities, a multiplicity in potential, so to speak. (Some of these identities will be metaphoric, while others have roots in concrete reality.)

All of these capacities lead to greater inner strength, affective resonance, frustration tolerance, empathic capacity, and, inevitably, wisdom. We do not teach these capacities but cultivate them, exploring defensive inhibitions and fragmentations in the process. How our patients make use of these capacities is ultimately up to them.

In these ways, the strivings of psychoanalytic processes are not conceived at behavioral or physiological levels, but rather as immersed in a process with metaphysical, psychological, and emotional goals. It is the inner life where we train our attention and embed ourselves—in the development of capacities that liberate our patients from behavioral or other psychic [End Page 628] constraints. Though these aspirations will have physiological substrates that can be linked to behavioral manifestations, they do not differentiate the perverse from the non-perverse at psychological or emotional levels.

Therefore, we...

关于 "扭曲 "的特刊,《美国影像》(American Imago
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 引言 精神分析作为一种知识体系,总是包含一些有争议的领域;其中一些概念和观点被认为是有争议的,但却仍然保留在我们的词典中,而另一些则被抛弃或成为禁忌。变态这个话题(甚至这个词)就是这样一个令人困扰的话题--它的语气和内涵都是病理学的,其过时的指代引起了巨大的焦虑甚至敌意。这并非毫无道理,也不无道理。从历史上看,这个词的使用方式伤害了某些亚群体(同性恋者是最公然受到伤害的群体),造成了非常真实的排斥和破坏性影响。尽管近些年来情况已经完全逆转,但这种伤害(和负罪感)仍然是显而易见的,仅仅是说出变态一词就会让人感到不安和疏远。因此,对于某些精神分析从业者来说,这个词已经成为禁区,那些甚至敢想这个词的人都会被判定为不道德,而其他人则会使用这个词,但往往不会明确其参数。至少从愿望上讲,我们不是一个贩卖道德主义和评判主义的行业。我们判断(作为思考的一部分),但不预先判断,我们不重视评判主义--那是一种缺乏同情心、同理心和理解力的看待他人的倾向。我们渴望敞开心扉,自由交流,甚至是憎恨的情感和思想。我们的无意识中蕴藏着人类全部的潜能,无论好坏。自由联想难道不正是为了促进我们表达潜藏在心灵深处的破坏性力量,从而通过命名来加深理解吗?那么,命名是否一定要病态化,从而损害而非促进理解呢?在精神分析界,这些问题的相关性各不相同 [End Page 627]。一些分析家随意使用变态一词,而另一些分析家,尤其是北美的分析家,则对其嗤之以鼻。也许,我们可以先定义一下精神分析的基本理想和目标,这些理想和目标环绕着精神健康,并蕴含其中,事实上,精神健康的定义就是这些理想和目标。精神分析是一个过程,其中隐含着以健康和广阔的方式成长和发展的假设。构成这种心灵和生活的要素是什么?虽然我们并不规定患者的生存方式,也不指示他们应该做出怎样的选择,但我们提倡的是一种培养心理健康能力的过程,一种对自己和他人都具有活力和建设性的生存方式。培养这些能力就是扩大病人的选择范围。其中包括体验各种感受的能力、构建自己生命意义的能力、治愈自我分裂和破碎部分的能力,以及培养多种自我状态并在其中保持灵活性的能力。我们努力实现多种自我状态的融合(即使永远无法实现),摒弃二元或僵化(非此即彼)的存在方式。在性方面,当代的一种假设侧重于固有的心理上的双重性或多重性,即性功能和性体验方面的流动性和灵活性。这并不意味着必须活出这种流动性,而是指在心理上接受种族、民族、性别和性身份的多重性,可以说是潜在的多重性。(其中一些身份是隐喻性的,而另一些则植根于具体的现实)。所有这些能力都会带来更大的内在力量、情感共鸣、挫折承受力、移情能力,以及不可避免的智慧。我们不是在传授这些能力,而是在培养它们,在这个过程中探索防御性抑制和片段。病人如何利用这些能力,最终取决于他们自己。从这些方面来看,精神分析过程的努力并不是在行为或生理层面上,而是沉浸在一个具有形而上学、心理学和情感目标的过程中。正是在内心生活中,我们训练我们的注意力,并将我们自己融入到能力的发展中,从而将我们的病人从行为或其他心理 [完 628 页] 束缚中解放出来。虽然这些愿望会有生理基础,可以与行为表现联系起来,但在心理或情感层面上,它们并不能区分反常与非反常。因此,我们...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
AMERICAN IMAGO
AMERICAN IMAGO HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
期刊介绍: Founded in 1939 by Sigmund Freud and Hanns Sachs, AMERICAN IMAGO is the preeminent scholarly journal of psychoanalysis. Appearing quarterly, AMERICAN IMAGO publishes innovative articles on the history and theory of psychoanalysis as well as on the reciprocal relations between psychoanalysis and the broad range of disciplines that constitute the human sciences. Since 2001, the journal has been edited by Peter L. Rudnytsky, who has made each issue a "special issue" and introduced a topical book review section, with a guest editor for every Fall issue.
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信