Race and Analytic Neutrality: Clinical and Theoretical Considerations

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Abstract

Neutrality remains a key concept underpinning the psychoanalytic attitude, but its operation in the clinical setting must be reconfigured if the countertransference is to be used as a source of data, conveyed by projective identification. Subjective responses thus mobilized in the analyst need to be processed before attention can return to the evenly suspended state, from which greater objectivity flows. Theory, internalized as part of the analyst’s emotional learning, operates preconsciously in the session; in clinical work with racial matters this includes, crucially, familiarity with internal racism, of which a model is briefly described. These ideas are illustrated via two clinical vignettes in which these themes are traced.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)371-393
Number of pages23
JournalPsychoanalytic Quarterly
Volume91
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Keywords

  • Race
  • analytic dyad
  • analytic theory
  • countertransference
  • emotional literacy
  • fantasy
  • neutrality
  • othering
  • projective identification

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