1st Edition

Individuation and Liberty in a Globalized World Psychosocial Perspectives on Freedom after Freedom

Edited By Stefano Carpani Copyright 2022
    262 Pages
    by Routledge

    262 Pages
    by Routledge

    What is the best way to understand the narratives of self-identity at the beginning of the 21st century? This interdisciplinary collection brings together perspectives from analytical psychology, sociology, psychiatry, psychosocial studies, and psychoanalysis to consider questions about individuation and freedom in our unhinged world.

    The contributors discuss the meaning of, and need for, individuation in individualized and liquid societies. The book begins with a comparison of three approaches: C.G. Jung’s individuation, Ulrich Beck’s individualization, and Zygmunt Bauman’s liquidity. This sets the tone for further consideration of topics including guilt, social media, global nomads, and surveillance. Theoretical reflections are enhanced by clinical material, and the book emphasizes the connections between sociology and psychoanalysis, offering significant insights into the importance of psychosocial approaches.

    This timely work will be of great interest to academics and scholars of psychosocial studies, Jungian studies, sociology, and politics.

    Preface by Andrew Samuels

    Introduction

    by Stefano Carpani

    Absolute Freedom is Freedom After Freedom

    Chapter 1

    Galit Atlas

    Dreaming Your Future. Dreaming Your Freedom

    Chapter 2

    John Beebe

    In Defense of the Freedoms of the Self

    Chapter 3

    Stefano Candellieri and Davide Favero

    The paradox of metaphor

    Chapter 4

    Stefano Carpani

    The Fall of the Berlin Wall

    Complex Theory and the Numinous in the Development of History: A neo-Jungian approach

    Chapter 5

    Ayse Devrim Basterzi, Gamze Ozcurumez Bilgili

    The Impossibility of Freedom: From Psychoanalytical Conceptions to Political Objections

    Chapter 6

    Roula-Maria Dib

    Individuation, Textuality, and Sexuality in Ursula Le Guin’s Lavini

    Chapter 7

    Robert Grande

    Mysterium Dissociationis: The masculine in crisis towards new forms of thought and relationship.

    Chapter 8

    Niccolò Fiorentino Polipo

    False Start: A Jungian Critique of Self-Help

    Chapter 9

    Chiara Giaccardi and Mauro Magatti

    Natality, Individuation and generative social action: From amor mundi to social generativity

    Chapter 10

    Elias Winterton

    ‘Roots in a pot’: The identity conundrum in global nomads.

    Chapter 11

    Elizabeth Leuenberger

    The Necessity of Guilt: a Freeing Movement of the Soul Towards Individuation

    Chapter 12

    Monica Luci

    Taking roots: individuation and floating in contemporary traumatic conditions

    Chapter 13

    Marcus Quintaes

    Paranoia, politics and the tyranny of the identical: Is there civilization in the transitions we are crossing?

    Chapter 14

    Huan Wang

    The applicability of analytical psychology in China: how a Western psychological lens might be adapted in the East

    Biography

    Stefano Carpani, M.A., M.Phil. is an Italian sociologist (post-graduate of the University of Cambridge) and psychoanalyst who trained at the C.G. Jung Institute, Zürich, accredited analyst CGJI-Z/IAAP, and a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Psychosocial and Psychoanalytical Studies at University of Essex. He works in private practice in Berlin in English, Italian, and Spanish. He is the initiator of the YouTube interview series Breakfast at Küsnacht, which aims to capture the voices of senior Jungians. Since 2017, he has collected more than 70 interviews. He is among the initiators of Psychosocial Wednesdays, a digital salon modeled on Freud’s Wednesday meetings in Vienna and Jung’s meetings at the Psychological Club, which features speakers from various psychoanalytic traditions, schools, and associated fields. He is the author of numerous papers and edited volumes, including Breakfast at Küsnacht: Conversations on C. G. Jung and Beyond (Chiron, 2020—IAJS book award finalist, for "Best edited Book"); The Plural Turn in Jungian and Post-Jungian Studies: The Work of Andrew Samuels (Routledge, 2021); Anthology of Contemporary Classics in Analytical psychology: The New Ancestors (Routledge, 2022); Lockdown Therapy: Jungian Perspectives on how the Pandemic Changed Psychoanalysis (Routledge, in print, July 2022).

    [This book] is a stunning collective meditation on the notions of individuation and freedom in the 21st century. Are the archetypes of individuation and freedom both timeless while, at the same time, constantly evolving and variable in the individual and specific cultures and eras? Does an individual "individuating in the 1920’s" look like an individual "individuating in the 2020’s"? What does individuation look like in a "fluid" society, in a "paranoid" society, in an "individualized" society? Do cultures individuate and what does that look like? These are some of the questions that this book raises with finely tuned scholarship, diversity, depth, and a graceful movement back and forth between psychology, sociology, philosophy and history.

    Thomas Singer, MD. Author and Editor

    The over-arching thrust and importance of Stefano Carpani’s extraordinary and ingenious edited collection is to return to the idea of something on a psychological level that can survive whatever the social order may hurl at it. Hence, his shrewd nuancing of the tensions between ‘individualization’ and ‘individuation’, and many other related aspects of his writings.

    Carpani’s project is extremely ambitious because he seeks to add a Jungian dimension to psychoanalytically informed psychosocial studies. That said, this is not a Jungian book, though at times one can but wonder at what intellectual life would be like if there had been a Jungian Frankfurt School, so to speak. And this adds to the value of the book as a whole: To show how interdisciplinarity and transdisciplinarity are, in our time, pretty much the only forms of disciplinarity that work. It follows that we need to allow ourselves freedom to travel the route mapped out by the book.

    Andrew Samuels, former Professor of Analytical Psychology, University of Essex. Author.