Analytical and Political Neutrality: Change, Privilege, and Responsibility

Authors

  • Matthew H. Bowker

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1234/fa.v0i71.194

Keywords:

psychoanalysis, psychology, neutrality, transference

Abstract

Tension between the ideal of analytic neutrality — although conceived and applied in various ways — and the putative danger of political neutrality is intrinsic to psychoanalytic investigations of culture and society. It presents itself with urgency in times of social conflict, especially when such conflict is characterized by or framed in terms of victimization, but it has not been a subject of rigorous debate. That the tension between analytic and political neutrality has not been widely examined might mean that when analysts engage in scholarly work outside of clinical settings (e.g., writing books or papers), we adopt a different set of norms to guide our behavior, norms that do not include whatever attitude of neutrality we may observe in the consulting room.1 But it might also mean that this tension is a site of resistance, that we are unwilling to look closely at a difficult aspect of our work because we expect it to yield uncomfortable experience. Of course, this resistance may be largely unconscious, leading us to miss or mistake the meanings and consequences of our positions

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Published

2018-02-28

How to Cite

Bowker, M. H. (2018). Analytical and Political Neutrality: Change, Privilege, and Responsibility. Free Associations, (71), 1–17. https://doi.org/10.1234/fa.v0i71.194

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Section

Articles