1st Edition

Respect, Plurality, and Prejudice A Psychoanalytical and Philosophical Enquiry into the Dynamics of Social Exclusion and Discrimination

By Lene Auestad Copyright 2015
    384 Pages
    by Routledge

    384 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book helps us understand the current resurgence of social prejudice against ethnic minority groups, the logics of scapegoating and the resulting violence. Our time is characterised by a growth in expressed hostility and violence towards people who are perceived as 'others'. Hatred towards and discrimination against minorities is on the rise. This book presents a new understanding of prejudice, racism, antisemitism, xenophobia, islamophobia, sexism and homophobia. It combines philosophy with psychoanalytic thinking, sociology and psycho-social studies, analysing the unconscious elements of social processes. The author makes a case for framing a questioning of prejudice, not in terms of normality versus pathology or deviance, but in what is socially unconscious. Hypocrisy and double standards are inherent in our social practices, reflecting the contradictions present in our thinking about these issues: that we both believe and do not believe in equality.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ABOUT THE AUTHOR INTRODUCTION CHAPTER ONE Subjectivity and absence: prejudice as a psychosocial theme CHAPTER TWO Primary process logic and prejudice CHAPTER THREE Contagion, conflict, and ambivalence: prejudice as transfer of shame and guiltCHAPTER FOUR Injurious speech and frames of mind CHAPTER FIVE Basic trust and alienation, or "we have nothing to reproach ourselves with"CHAPTER SIX Adaptation, containment, experience: Adorno, psychoanalytic developments, and the potential for social critiqueCHAPTER SEVEN Perspectivism and plurality: Arendt's contribution to thinking about respect and prejudiceCHAPTER EIGHT Responsibility and the unconscious: sketches for a psychoanalytically informed ethicsNOTES REFERENCES INDEX

    Biography

    Lene Auestad