1st Edition

Psychoanalysis in Social Research Shifting theories and reframing concepts

By Claudia Lapping Copyright 2011
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    The use of psychoanalytic ideas to explore social and political questions is not new. Freud began this work himself and social research has consistently drawn on his ideas. This makes perfect sense. Social and political theory must find ways to conceptualise the relation between human subjects and our social environment; and the distinctive and intense observation of individual psychical structuring afforded within clinical psychoanalysis has given rise to rich theoretical and methodological resources for doing just this. However, psychoanalytic concepts do not remain the same when they are rearticulated in the context of research.

    This book traces the reiteration and transformation of concepts in the psychoanalytic theory of Freud, Klein and Lacan, the social theory of Butler, Derrida, Foucault, Laclau and Zizek, and case studies of empirical research ranging from the classic Tavistock Institute studies to contemporary work in politics, gender studies, cultural studies and education. Each chapter explores one cluster of concepts:

    • Melancholia, loss and subjectivity
    • Overdetermination and free association
    • Resistance, reflexivity and the compulsion to repeat
    • Repression, disavowal and foreclosure
    • Psychic defenses and social defenses

    Arguing against the reification of psychoanalytic concepts, Claudia Lapping suggests the need for a reflexive understanding of the play of attachments and substitutions as concepts are reframed in the contrasting activities of psychoanalysis and research.

    Introduction: Reframing Psychoanalytic Concepts, or Bricolage Decomposed  1. Melancholia: Lost Objects of National, Ethnic, Classed, Gendered and Sexual Identities  2. Overdetermination: The Conceptualization of Dreams and Discourse  3. Textures of Resistance: 'Discourse' and 'Psyche' and 'The Compulsion to Repeat'  4. Signifying Chains in Academic Practice: The Appearance and Disappearance of Affect, Politics and Methodology  5. From Psychic Defenses to Social Defenses: Recontextualising Strategies and Klein's Theory of Ego Development  Conclusion: Troubling Attachments

    Biography

    Claudia Lapping is Senior Lecturer at the Institute of Education, University of London, where she teaches on the doctoral programme and on the MA Psychosocial Studies and Education. She is interested in the development of psychosocial methodologies and her research draws on sociological and psychoanalytic approaches to explore knowledge practices in higher education.