Acknowledgments
By Way of a Preface
Introduction
1. Defining Politics
2. Psychoanalysis and Political Theory
3. Politics and the Fear of Breakdown
4. Practicing Democracy
5. Democratic Imaginaries
6. Becoming Citizens
7. Definitions of the Situation
8. Deliberating Otherwise
9. Political Works of Mourning
10. Public Will and Action
11. Radical Imaginaries
12. Nationalism and the Fear of Breakdown
Conclusion: Working Through the Breakdown
Notes
References
Index
Noëlle McAfee is a professor of philosophy and the director of the Psychoanalytic Studies Program at Emory University. Her books include Habermas, Kristeva, and Citizenship (2000), Julia Kristeva (2003), and Democracy and the Political Unconscious (Columbia, 2008).
In exploring the fear of breakdown that underlies human existence,
Noëlle McAfee creates a genuine intellectual breakthrough—her book
is a stunningly original exploration of the political significance
of mourning. This is one of the most thrilling books I have read in
years.
*Mari Ruti, author of Penis Envy and Other Bad Feelings: The
Emotional Costs of Everyday Life*
Fear of Breakdown is a tour de force that provides us with a new
framework that resolves some of the tensions between psychoanalysis
and politics through an interpretation of D. W. Winnicott’s notion
of breakdown. McAfee offers us nothing less than a rethinking of
key terms of politics—citizenship, deliberation, false
consciousness, and nationalism, to name a few. A must-read for
anyone concerned with the crisis of democracy.
*Drucilla Cornell, coauthor of The Spirit of Revolution: Beyond
the Dead Ends of Man*
Hercules had twelve labors but, if Noëlle McAfee is right,
democratic citizens have only six tasks to undertake for the
Herculean task of reclaiming democracy. Guided by Winnicott’s
penetrating insight that the fear of breakdown is a fear of what
has already happened, McAfee develops a vision of politics as a
deliberative practice of political working through, open to
'radical questioning and learning anew.' A joy to read.
*Bonnie Honig, author of Public Things: Democracy in
Disrepair*
Where Freud’s rather dark account of human nature tended to
hypostatize the antisocial aspects of the psyche, subsequent
psychoanalytic theorists on the left have tended to err in the
opposite direction, painting an overly socialized picture of the
human animal. McAfee avoids both errors and develops a progressive
view of politics that does not simplify the complexities of the
human nature. Her analysis of Winnicott’s notion of the ‘fear of
breakdown’ is especially useful for conceptualizing the current
political landscape.
*Joel Whitebook, author of Freud: An Intellectual
Biography*
Ambitious and provocative . . . a learned and thought-provoking
call for a radical reimagination of democratic institutions.
*Choice*
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