Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- PSYCHOANALYTIC MYTHOLOGIES
- Points of view
- Making love to my ego
- The pinball project
- Psychopolitical cults
- The wet group
- Interpersonal skills
- Learn and enjoy
- Another language
- English identity, Ireland and violence
- Racing
- Diana's subjects
- Personal response under attack
- In Disney's world
- Looking to the future, and back
- Windows on the mind
- Soap trek
- Clubbing
- E and me
- Garage nightmares
- Helpless in Japan
- Greek chairs
- Open secrets
- Passé
- PSYCHOANALYTIC MYTH TODAY
Diana's subjects
from PSYCHOANALYTIC MYTHOLOGIES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- PSYCHOANALYTIC MYTHOLOGIES
- Points of view
- Making love to my ego
- The pinball project
- Psychopolitical cults
- The wet group
- Interpersonal skills
- Learn and enjoy
- Another language
- English identity, Ireland and violence
- Racing
- Diana's subjects
- Personal response under attack
- In Disney's world
- Looking to the future, and back
- Windows on the mind
- Soap trek
- Clubbing
- E and me
- Garage nightmares
- Helpless in Japan
- Greek chairs
- Open secrets
- Passé
- PSYCHOANALYTIC MYTH TODAY
Summary
Millions of people felt themselves being swept along by a tide of emotion following Diana's death – as if this were a collective process of shock, grief and mourning as much as an individual response, and as if those intertwined individual and collective feelings were always there, waiting to be released at a moment like this. They were not. But we live in a culture which is psychologically structured so that events of this kind evoke certain kinds of feelings about who we are and what our relationship with others is like, and then we feel them with such intensity that we imagine that they must be very deep, and necessarily true.
Rather than reveal some deep underlying psychological nature, however, they express the ways in which we have come to function as psychological beings – and, in particular, the way we absorb and display themes of unconscious emotions as subjects of a psychoanalytic culture. The week between the death and the funeral saw people represent themselves as psychoanalytic selves, and so it is worth reflecting on how this has been accomplished, so that we do not make the mistake of then reading these events as simply confirming psychoanalysis as universally true. We might then also understand better what is really going on.
One of the powerful psychoanalytic motifs of that fraught week was of a rising crescendo of feeling, and a sense that people were experiencing something overwhelming and barely comprehensible.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Psychoanalytic Mythologies , pp. 45 - 48Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2009