叙事、本体论安全与无意识幻想:所谓移民危机中的德国与欧洲神话

IF 4 1区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE
C. N. L. Gellwitzki, Anne‐Marie Houde
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文综合了关于叙事和克莱因式焦虑防御机制的学术研究,建立了一个框架,使我们能够细致入微地理解危机时期的本体论安全寻求动态。本文以2015年所谓的移民危机期间德国对欧盟的叙述为例,探讨了无意识幻想如何影响和指导集体决策过程的更广泛问题,以及叙述究竟如何帮助主体管理焦虑以维持本体论安全感的问题。我们表明,以德国为例,欧盟提供了一个高度有效的政治神话,通过试图引入“欧洲性”这一好的部分,它既指导了政府在危机期间的决策,也指导了德国自我认同叙事的构建。至关重要的是,德国的自我认同叙事和关于欧盟的叙事不仅密不可分,而且欧盟也成为了一个理想化的(克莱因式的)部分客体。在所谓的移民危机期间,这促进了投射性认同的过程,即颠覆欧洲价值观和人道主义叙事的决定以及普遍的“坏”被外化并投射到其他成员国,最明显的是Visegrád国家。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Narratives, Ontological Security, and Unconscious Phantasy: Germany and the European Myth During the so‐called Migration Crisis
This article synthesizes scholarship on narratives and Kleinian defense mechanisms against anxiety to develop a framework that enables a nuanced understanding of ontological security- seeking dynamics in times of crisis. Using the case study of the German narrative of the European Union during the so-called migration crisis of 2015, this article engages with the broader question of how unconscious phantasy influences and guides decision- making processes on a collective level as well as the question of how exactly narratives help subjects to manage anxiety to maintain a sense of ontological security. We show that, in the case of Germany, the EU offers a highly affective political myth that has guided both the decision-making of the government during the crisis and the construction of German self- identity narratives by attempting to introject the good part- object of “Europeanness.” Crucially, German self- identity narratives and narratives on the EU were not only inextricably linked but the EU also became an idealized (Kleinian) part- object. During the so- called migration crisis, this fostered processes of projective identification whereby decisions subverting European values and humanitarian narratives as well as general “badness” were externalized and projected onto other member states, most notably the Visegrád states.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
6.50%
发文量
70
期刊介绍: Understanding the psychological aspects of national and international political developments is increasingly important in this age of international tension and sweeping political change. Political Psychology, the journal of the International Society of Political Psychology, is dedicated to the analysis of the interrelationships between psychological and political processes. International contributors draw on a diverse range of sources, including clinical and cognitive psychology, economics, history, international relations, philosophy, political science, political theory, sociology, personality and social psychology.
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