A Political Mind Special - “Psychoanalytic Object relations theory as a necessary foundation of social democracy”
Speaker: Prof Michael Rustin
Tuesday 8th October 2024
8:15pm - 9:45pm BST
These discussions will be delivered remotely via Zoom.
Recording available for 1 week
Now that we are beginning another period in which a Labour government is in office, what expectations do we have about what kind of society it might encourage into being? Do we expect little more than a continuation of the neo-liberalism we have lived under for the last 40 + years, perhaps with its roughest edges knocked off? Or do we think that “the Forward March of Labour”, declared “Halted” by Eric Hobsbawm in 1978, will now be resumed, and if so, is its ultimate destination the overthrow of capitalism?
I will argue in this paper that there is need for the re-articulation of an idea of social democracy, as a feasible compromise between recognising a useful role for capitalism in society, and a functioning democratic society and state. Psychoanalytic object relations theory had some influence on the early post-Second War development of social democracy in Britain, through the influence of Bowlby, Winnicott and the Kleinian’s on social policy, especially on the understanding of child development. I will argue in this paper that a larger approach to object-relatedness can provide a necessary psycho-social foundation for a social democratic worldview. It can provide a frame in which its necessary diversity of social purposes can be understood and valued. Social democratic theory and politics can be strengthened, I shall claim, if they are based on a psychoanalytically based theory of mental life.
Michael Rustin is Professor of Sociology at the University of East London, a Visiting Professor at the Tavistock Clinic and at the University of Essex, and an Associate of the British Psychoanalytical Society. He helped develop postgraduate academic study at the Tavistock. He has a long-standing interest in psychoanalysis, and its relation to politics. He has been involved in the academic accreditation of psychoanalytic programmes at the Tavistock Clinic and the University of East London over many years, including a substantial programme of doctoral research in Child Psychotherapy. His books include 'The Good Society and the Inner World' (1991), 'Reason and Unreason' (2001), 'Narratives of Love and Loss: Studies in Modern Children’s Fiction' (1989/2002), 'Mirror to Nature: Drama Psychoanalysis and Society' (2002) both with Margaret Rustin, and 'The Inner World of Doctor Who: Psychoanalytic Reflections in Time and Space', with Ian MacRury. He co-edited ‘Social Defences against Anxiety’ with David Armstrong (2016) and with Margaret Rustin is co-author of ‘Reading KIein’ (2017).
Please note: This lecture will be recorded and available for 1 week to all registered participants.
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London
United Kingdom
Standard Online via Zoom | £ 30.00 |
Concession Online via Zoom | £ 20.00 |