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Slavery, Hatred of the Other, and Lacanian Jouissance with Sheldon George, PhD

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Slavery, Hatred of the Other, and Lacanian Jouissance with Sheldon George, PhD

Saturday, November 7, 2020 10:00am to 12:15pm
Zoom Event
Sponsored by: 
The New School

Our political and social moment seems destabilized by an increased emphasis on racial difference.  Freud, upon witnessing the horrors of World War I, first recognized within human subjects a drive toward aggression that he argued must be repressed for the sustainability of civilization.  But, ending only a few decades before Freud’s writings, slavery fully manifested this psychic drive toward aggression belatedly recognized by Freud; and what’s more, slavery emerged as a stabilizing foundation for central aspects of American society.  Through recourse to Lacanian theory, this talk argues that race and racism function as sources of psychic pleasure, or what Lacan calls jouissance.  This jouissance is a mode of enjoyment that lures the subject to perilous transgressions that stabilize American society into its consistently oppressive racial configuration.  Moving through an analysis of American slave masters’ efforts to establish slavery as a mask for what we can describe after Lacan as the psychic lack of the subject—a mask that refuted lack with racial superiority—the talk will turn to the writings of Zora Neale Hurston to describe religion and race as mechanisms through which African Americans themselves contend against social unveilings of psychic lack. Ending with a reading of the role played by pleasure in contemporary incidents of police violence, the talk presents race and racism as apparatuses that mediates subjective lack.  Race, it argues, binds contemporary American civilization to sustained modes of psychic pleasure and discontent that grew out of the atrocity of slavery.

 

Sheldon George, PhD is Professor of English and Chair of the English department at Simmons University in Boston. His scholarship centers on Lacanian psychoanalytic theory as it applies to analyzing  American and African-American literature and culture. He is author of Trauma and Race: A Lacanian Study of African American Racial Identity and coeditor with Jean Wyatt of Reading Contemporary Black British and African American Women Writers: Race, Ethics, Narrative Form. He is currently completing a collection, coedited with Derek Hook for Routledge Press, Lacan and Race: Racism, Identity, and Psychoanalytic Theory.

 

Fees: $65 for the General Public, $25 for Students/Candidates

CEs: 
2.00
Contact Person: 
Mylor Treneer
Email: 
mylort@msn.com
Phone Number: 
(509) 307-2127
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