Ernest Jones Lecture 2023

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"Can psychoanalysis help us address free speech controversies?"

ERNEST JONES LECTURE 2023
"Can psychoanalysis help us address free speech controversies?"

Wednesday 14th June
8.15pm - 9.45pm (BST)

Speaker: Anthony Julius

Chaired by Vic Sedlak, President of the British Psychoanalytical Society

Hybrid event - Online via Zoom and in person at the Institute of Psychoanalysis

This event will be recorded and available for 1 week to all registered participants


Distinguishing between the present and the near-past, ask: How was free speech championed then, and how now? 

"Then," by efforts to enlarge speech boundaries – what could be said, who could speak, and in what places and to what audiences. The championing was successful. What could once only be whispered, could be spoken with confidence and in full voice. The hitherto silent were finding their voice and were being heard. Topics that had been suppressed, forms of expression that had been proscribed, etc. – were released into the public realm. It was an affair, most generally, of the overrunning of limitations, with a view to redefining them, setting the parameters wider. Those were liberating, invigorating, exciting times. 

But "now"? Not so invigorating, not so exciting. Instead, we experience a giddy disorientation, which disables any activity of defence of free speech (let alone championing). The overrunning of boundaries has destroyed the very notion of boundary.  And there is a new censoriousness, which threatens the achievements of the recent past but is commonly defended in the name of free speech. We might say: We have passed from limitations on free speech, which were overcome, to threats to free speech, which we struggle to overcome without destroying what we seek to defend. It is not surprising that we find ourselves in a state of confusion and demoralisation. Is there a way out?


Anthony Julius is Deputy Chair of the law firm Mishcon de Reya, a Professor in the Law Faculty, at UCL (where he occupies the chair in Law and the Arts), and a Visiting Professor at Haifa University, Israel. He is the author of several books, including Transgressions: The Offences of Art (Thames and Hudson, 2002) and Trials of the Diaspora: A History of Anti-Semitism in England (OUP, 2010, 2012). In 2020, he co-edited the volume Bentham and the Arts (UCL Press), contributing the essay, "More Bentham, Less Mill."  Among his current writing projects is a book provisionally entitled "Free Speech for Liberals." 


Vic Sedlak is a Training and Supervising Analyst of the British Psychoanalytical Society and is currently the President of the Society.  He is in private practice in the North of England.


REFUND POLICY: Tickets are fully refundable until 14 days before the lecture, after which time no refunds will be issued.

Concession tickets are available, for students, BPAS candidates and NHS trainees and nurses. Please email outreach@iopa.org.uk if you are unsure if you qualify for a concession ticket.

Views and opinions expressed by speakers are their own and do not represent the views or opinions of the Institute, event organisers or other speakers. We expect delegates to respect the confidentiality of clinical material discussed in our events. The content must not be recorded, conveyed or disseminated in any format and participants must not share access to the event with non-registered participants.

 

When
June 14th, 2023 8:15 PM through  9:45 PM
Location
Hybrid Event, online via Zoom
& In person at The Institute of Psychoanalysis
Byron House
112A Shirland Road
London W9 2BT
United Kingdom
Contact
Event Fee(s)
Standard In Person £ 30.00
Concession In Person £ 20.00
Standard Online via Zoom £ 30.00
Concesssion Online via Zoom £ 20.00
If selected, only members with the status New, Current or Grace and those that have a website account will be able to register for this event.
Standard In Person £ 30.00
Concession In Person £ 20.00
Standard Online via Zoom £ 30.00
Concesssion Online via Zoom £ 20.00