记忆、殖民主义和精神病学:集体记忆如何助长疯狂

IF 2.6 0 PHILOSOPHY
E. Walsh
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要:本文认为,殖民主义仍然掌握着建构现实的重要工具:记忆。认知神经科学和跨学科记忆研究的发展表明,记忆比我们过去认为的更具创造性,与人的想象能力联系在一起,这表明记忆不仅仅是一个再生过程,而是一个复杂的重建过程。借鉴法农的精神病学著作《异化与自由》黑皮肤,白面膜;和《悲惨的地球》,这篇文章试图说明殖民主义如何继续参与这种重建记忆的过程。殖民主义既影响了情景记忆,即我们作为个体对自己过去的记忆,也影响了集体记忆,即我们在社会中拥有的主体间的共同叙述。我认为,作为种族化的个人自我保护的一种手段,主导的集体记忆应该被拒绝,因为这些记忆并没有公正地对待殖民主义的暴力。然而,在我们的社会中,拒绝占主导地位的集体记忆带来了巨大的个人成本,因为它为种族化的个人创造了一个创伤循环。我认为精神病学本身在种族化的个体所经历的异化中起着工具性的作用,因为精神病学还没有意识到殖民主义对记忆的持续控制。这篇文章将法农文本中的记忆理论拼凑在一起,表明如果精神病学家将法农关于记忆的见解融入到他们的实践中,这种异化的循环是可以被打破的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Memory, Colonialism, and Psychiatry How Collective Memories Underwrite Madness
Abstract:This article defends the idea that colonialism still has a grasp on a valuable tool in the construction of our reality: memory. Developments in cognitive neuroscience and interdisciplinary memory studies propose that memory is far more creative and tied to one's imaginal capacities than we used to believe, suggesting that remembering is not simply a reproductive process, but a complex reconstructive process. Drawing on the psychiatric works of Frantz Fanon, in Alienation & Freedom; Black Skin, White Masks; and Wretched of the Earth, this article seeks to illustrate the ways in which colonialism continues to be involved in this reconstructive memory process. Colonialism has affected both episodic memories, the kind we have as individuals regarding our own past, and collective memories, the intersubjective shared narratives we possess in our societies. I argue that dominant collective memories ought to be rejected as a means of self-preservation for racialized individuals because these memories do not do justice to the violence of colonialism. Nevertheless, rejection of dominant collective memories comes at a significant personal cost in our societies, as it creates a traumatic loop for racialized individuals. I propose that psychiatry itself plays an instrumental role in the alienation experienced by racialized individuals because psychiatry has not yet appreciated the ways in which colonialism continues to have a hold on memory. Piecing together a theory of remembering in Fanon's texts, this article suggests that this cycle of alienation can be broken, if psychiatrists incorporate Fanon's insights regarding memory into their practice.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
4.30%
发文量
40
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