Coronavirus pandemic and its significance

PSYCHOANALYSIS DURING THE PANDEMIC

  • Michael Rustin
Keywords: pandemic, combined and uneven development, modern vs progressive modernization, containment, repression, psycho-social analysis

Abstract

This article examines the meanings of the Coronavirus Pandemic from a perspective which is both socio-political and psychoanalytic. It suggests that the concept of "combined and uneven development" is relevant to understanding the events which are now taking place. This is because the pandemic has brought together the genesis of a new disease in conditions where the interface between society and the natural world is unregulated, but also where modern forms of communication have enabled an unprecedentedly rapid spread of the disease to take place, across the entire globe. Multiple lines of social division are being exposed by the crisis, as social classes, ethnic populations, nations and regions are differentially harmed. Contrasting priorities, ideological in origin, are being revealed in governments’ response to the virus, in the commitment they give to the preservation of lives compared with other material interests. In a second part of the article, psycho-social dimensions of the crisis are explored. A psychoanalytical perspective focuses on anxieties as these are generated by the extreme disruption and risks posed by the crisis. It is suggested that these are not only conscious but also unconscious, giving rise to destructive kinds of psychological splitting and denial, and disrupting capacities for reflective decision-making. It is argued that a loss of "containing" mental and social structures is now having damaging effects, and that their repair may be the precondition for constructive resolutions of a general social crisis.

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Author Biography

Michael Rustin

Michael Rustin – Michael Rustin is a Professor of Sociology at the University of East London, and a Visiting Professor at the Tavistock Clinic and at the University of Essex. He was Head of Department of Sociology and Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences over 25 years, until his partial retirement in 2003. Since then his main teaching work has been at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust, on postgraduate courses in the field of psychoanalysis. He was a co-founding editor, with Doreen Massey and Stuart Hall, of the journal Soundings in 1995. After many years work together on Soundings, he co-edited with them Alternatives to Neoliberalism: the Kilburn Manifesto, in 2015. His own work has been substantially concerned with the cultural and social applications of psychoanalytic ideas. He is now coordinating a programmatic series Soundings Futures, for Soundings.

Published
2021-05-13
How to Cite
RustinM. (2021). Coronavirus pandemic and its significance. Journal of Clinical and Applied Psychoanalysis, 2(1), 87-98. Retrieved from https://psychoanalysis-journal.hse.ru/article/view/12413