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Robert M. Young Online Writings
PSYCHOANALYSIS AND RACISM: A LOUD SILENCE
by Robert M. Young
The analytic space is designed to be containing and enabling, but much
of life is not so constructive and safe. Racism and associated forms of institutionalised
hatred - nationalism, certain forms of virulent tribalism - strike me as the most obvious
areas of the internal worlds of humans which do not seem amenable to the forces of
enlightenment. Alas, although psychoanalysis has addressed itself to other forms of being
less than fully and constructively human - for example, psychosis, psychopathy, autism,
mental handicap - the psychoanalytic literature is relatively silent on the subject of
racism. My aim in this essay is to explore the issues and the literature as something of a
'worst-case' study of what we are up against in the understanding of human nature and the
horrid, contents of a distressingly large portion of most people's mental space - the
worst manifestations of the destructive side of our humanity. The psychological
characteristics of racism are splitting, violent projective identification, stereotyping
and scapegoating.
I want to begin with two quotations. The first is from a U.N.E.S.C.O.
publication entitled The Race Question in Modern Science: '...among the Dakota
Sioux Indians in the state of South Dakota it is regarded as incorrect to answer a
question in the presence of others who do not know the answer; this might be interpreted
as showing off, or as bringing shame to others, and is consequently condemned by the whole
group' (quoted in Levidow, 1978 , p.29). Is it surprising, then, that these people don't
do well on IQ tests?
The second quotation is from an eminent scientist, C. D. Darlington,
who was a Fellow of the Royal Society and a Professor of Genetics at Oxford. In his book
on The Evolution of Man and Society, he wrote, 'All advanced societies, as we have
seen, arise from a stratification of social classes whose genetic differences and mutual
dependence are the permanent foundation of their advance.' (Darlington, 1969, p. ).
'Indeed, class differences ultimately all derive from genetic and, usually, racial
differences' (p. 547). 'The colonised and genetically stratified societies are, as always,
advancing faster than the uncolonized or decolonized and unstratified societies' (p. ).
'In short, racial discrimination has a genetic basis with a large instinctive and
irrational component. Its action may be modified by education or by economic processes.
But it cannot be suppressed by law' (p. 606).
According to Darlington, science tells us that segregation and
apartheid are not to be lightly dismissed. The principle of subordinating one racial group
to another 'has governed the evolution of all advancing societies since soon after the
beginning of agriculture. And it has been the means of their advancement' (p. 607).
Similarly, 'All the great races of man differ in smell; they dislike one another's smell
and are kept apart by it. But in the nostrils of all other races the pygmies positively
stink. It is a property which has arisen from their genetic and ecological isolation' (p.
645). The Irish, the working class and black people do not fare much better in
Darlington's account, though their supposed genetic deficiencies are different ones.
I began with those quotations - one rather touching and edifying,
showing why the Sioux consider IQ tests impolite, the other obviously racist, even though
written by an authoritative scientist - to illustrate a premise of what I want to say:
that there are, in truth, very striking cultural differences, ones which are likely to
evoke strong reactions between different identifiable groups, and experts who write about
them can do so in progressive and reactionary ways.
Nor are all the differences which lead to racialist oppression based on
obvious and easily observable features. I am told that the untouchables of Japan are
simply not physically identifiable as different from other Japanese, yet they are banished
from polite society and are confined to certain areas and certain trades, especially work
with leather.
When there are identifiable differences, there are forms of
discrimination within so-called races. Garveyism in the West Indies and United
States had as its first battle the need to fight the hierarchy extending from
light-skinned to dark-skinned blacks, before it could address the problem of black/white
racism. It remains true in both countries that light skin is widely admired, and
light-skinned leaders have predominated in the West Indies. Similarly, the (East) Indian
caste system is a powerful racist structure within a larger culture, a culture which is in
some other contexts perceived as a relatively homogeneous racial minority which merits a
uniform degree of racial oppression. Franz Fanon makes a similar point about shades of
black as perceived by blacks themselves. In South Africa, blacks resent Indians and see
their role as small shopkeepers as part of their oppression and stereotype them as cheats.
It should be obvious by now that I could easily - or fairly easily - so
muddle up the putatively natural or ethnic basis of concepts of race that it wont wash to
try to base racism on any clear-cut real or biological types. Indeed, there is a large and
sophisticated literature in the social sciences which has sought to delineate the concept
of race from those of class and nation. This literature has been critically canvassed by
Floya Anthias in 'Race and Class Revisited - Conceptualising Race and Racism' (1990). She
places nationhood and ethnicity 'as central organising principles of social relations in
the modern era' and locates the concept of race in relation to those notions (p. 38).
However, as Benedict Anderson has eloquently shown, nationhood is itself an historically
contingent social construct; a nation is an Imagined Community, with no natural
basis and, in most cases, a rather arbitrary and recent origin (1983).
Here is Anthias' summary. It is terminologically dense but provides a
useful reminder of the complexity of the terrain of race: 'Race has no analytical validity
in its own right but is a social construction with its own representational,
organisational and experiential forms linking it ontologically to the wider category of
ethnos which provides its analytical axis. Race denotes a particular way in which communal
or collective differences come to be constructed and understood. Its placement within the
category of ethnos, that is nation and ethnicity, is not in terms of cultures of
difference but in terms of the specific positing of boundaries. These involve mechanisms
of both inclusion and exclusion of individuals on the basis of the categorisation of human
subjects into those that can belong and those that cannot. From this point of view, race
is a particular articulation of where and how the boundary is to be constructed. In the
case it is on the basis of an immutable fixed biologically or physiognomically based
difference. This may be seen to be expressed in culture or life-style but is always
grounded in some notion of stock, involving the collective heredity of traits' (p. 22).
Fortunately, the putative biological difference, the notion of 'stock'
and 'the collective heredity of traits' have not stood up to scientific scrutiny. The
close study of blood groups has shown a continuum, not a clear boundary, at the points
where racial differentiation is claimed by the racialists. Claimed racial differences are
not natural; they are naturalised. Some close students of the issue have argued
that no serious natural phenomenon can be identified as 'race' and relegate the term to
being merely a 'category of everyday life' (p. 32). If that is taken to mean that it is an
ideological rather than a natural category, I would agree. However, like all ideological
categories, it is certainly real and deeply embedded in human psychology - more deeply and
intractably than we often suppose, as I shall attempt to show. For the moment, my point is
that we have here a psychological and ideological phenomenon which is firmly rooted in the
society. It is not a disease to be identified, diagnosed and treated. Rather, it is a
mediation of an amalgam of economic, ethnic, class and nationalist forces which engender (1)
splitting off taboo or feared aspects of the self; (2) projection of them onto the Other,
who (3) usually reprojects a version of them which is often amplified; (4) scapegoating
and stereotyping a particular social group. The mechanisms are primitive and
universal, but their deployment is learned in tacit ways, imbibed with the culture,
expressed as second nature, without deliberation.
My second point takes us to the loud silence in the psychoanalytic
literature. Joel Kovel says somewhere that the main barrier to getting the psychoanalytic
community to address social, much less radical, issues lies in the social location of its
practitioners. An allied observation - my own - is that a racist society will have a
racist science (Young, 1987). The problem of racism and psychoanalysis is a special case
of a issue in recent studies in the social construction of knowledge, i. e., that groups
seek legitimacy in nature, including the allegedly biologically 'given', for their social
views and beliefs. The social process of scientific research and writing involves naturalisation, the embodiment of belief systems in the agendas and 'findings' of science. In truth,
conceptions of nature, including human nature, are made, not found. Once such
naturalisations get legitimated, they find their way into individuals and are deeply -
unconsciously - sedimented and become routine: once again, second nature.
The unbearable and unacceptable parts of the group and the individual
may be wishes, fears, idealisations, denigrations. When they get split off and projected
into others, anxiety in the self and the group is diminished. When the others take them up
and behave according to the stereotype, the projection is vindicated: in the 'lazy
nigger', the 'cunning yid', the 'crazy Indian', the 'fanatical Arab'. Both sides then live
on in a set of mutual projections and reprojections, rather like those which can be
attributed to a stable married couple whose relationship is founded on a set of mutual
projective identifications. Those involved in racism are among the most virulent in human
nature. They rank with, and often combine with, torture, murder, foetocide, genocide - the
most violent and snarling expressions of spite, perversity and cruel depravity. I am
thinking of rape, castration, bayoneting. lynching, gassing, extermination and related
forms of behaviour toward inferiorised peoples such as blacks, Tamils, Jews,
Indians, Palestinians, Protestants, Catholics, Kurds, Armenians, Bosnians, Muslims,
Croatians.
These are not facts about correctable biases in the psychoanalytic
lirterature or in human nature; they are facts about the sociology of knowledge and of the
unconscious. The culture's values and a professional group's values will determine the
questions that get asked, what counts as an acceptable answer, what research is
prestigious, what work gets funded and published or - as the fundamental particle
physicists say about fashions in rteseasrch - what is 'sexy'. In this and the previous
paragraphs I have juxtaposed the virulence and ubiquity of racism with the blinkered
social location of those who ponder and write and edit and publish in the psychoanalytic
world. There is a loud silence in the psychoanalytic literature about racism. Why? Because
it is not a topic affecting the institutions, the careers, the prestige, the patronage
networks and the incomes of by far the majority of psychoanalysts and psychotherapists.
Ask yourself how many black patients get treated or even heard of or how many black
psychotherapists or psychoanalysts you know or know about. I can think of only a handful
and know of only a small number of inquiries which are attempting to understand the gap
between blacks and Asians in the population and the number of patients and therapists from
these minority groups in Britain (Ilahi, 1988).
Of course, black/white racism is not the only kind. This explains the
small amount of literature which I have found in the psychoanalytic journals. It is about
anti-semitism, with particular reference to the Holocaust and work with survivors of
Hitler's camps (Kren 1987; Faimberg, 1988). It would be silly to think that psychoanalysis
is free from racism, and I don't only mean anti-gentile attitudes. I recently read the
autobiography of an eminent psychoanalyst who has held the highest offices in his
profession, and it was patently anti-semitic. I asked him about this in the presence of
his Jewish (actually his second Jewish) wife, and he acknowledged that it was so. He said,
rather wistfully, that they just feel somehow alien to him. Lest it be thought that I am
making a cheap shot here, read on to the end of the essay, where the near-inevitability of
something like his - and my - racism will be made apparent.
There are, of course, some notable exceptions to this bleak picture,
this loud silence - the writings of Fanon. Kovel and Wolfenstein - and I shall revert to
these. Even so, given the role of racism in the various societies where the largest number
of psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists live and work, the silence is
resounding. As I was writing this essay, I read a review by the eminent socialist
historian, Gwyn Williams, in which he said that a good historian learns how to listen for
the silences. I'd like to think I am a good historian, and I want to make a noise about
this silence. It's not acceptable.
In the period with which my own historical research has been mainly
concerned there is a readily apparent truism which also applies to the present, as I shall
argue below. People of good will, people of great intelligence and liberality, people (I
am referring to the mid-nineteenth century) who were deeply opposed to slavery, could
nevertheless be straightforwardly and profoundly racist. Darwin and Huxley - pre-eminent
in their age for shining the light of science and fighting superstition, prejudice and
obscurantism - are striking examples. Here is Huxley from an essay entitled 'Emancipation:
Black and White', written in 1865: 'It may be quite true that some negroes are better that
some white men; but no rational man, cognizant of the facts, believes that the average
negro is the equal, still less the superior, of the average white man. And, if this be
true, it is simply incredible that, when all his disabilities are removed, and our
prognathous [projecting jaw] relative has a fair field and no favour, as well as no
oppressor, he will be able to compete successfully with his bigger-brained and
smaller-jawed rival, in a contest which is to be carried on by thoughts and not by bites.
The highest places in the hierarchy of civilisation will assuredly not be within the reach
of our dusky cousins, though it is by no means necessary that they should be restricted to
the lowest. But whatever the position of stable equilibrium into which the laws of social
gravitation may bring the negro, all responsibility for the result will henceforward lie
between nature and him. The white man may wash his hands of it, and the Caucasian
conscience be void of reproach for evermore. And this, if we look to the bottom of the
matter, is the real justification for the abolition policy' (Huxley, l865, pp. 17-18).
Huxley's argument then turns to the subject of women, who receive the
same treatment: it is illiberal to add social inequality to their obvious biological
inferiority. He concludes with respect to both sorts of inferior creatures: 'The duty of
man is to see that not a grain is piled upon that load beyond what nature imposes; that
injustice is not added to inequality' (p.23).
In The Descent of Man, Darwin's second most important book and
the one in which he spelled out the implications of his theory of evolution for humankind,
he wrote, 'But the inheritance of property by itself is very far from evil; for without
the accumulation of capital the arts could not progress; and it is chiefly through their
power that the civilised races have extended and are now everywhere extending their range,
so as to take the place of the lower races' (Darwin, 1874, p. 135).
It could be argued that these men were not directly enough concerned
with the race question to be subjected to this scrutiny. In fact, both were seriously
involved in the abolitionist movement. Even so, let's look at Abraham Lincoln, the man who
freed the slaves and who vies with Nelson Mandela in my mind for the position of dwelling
most consistently in the depressive position and thinking under fire in the midst of an
impossible set of contending forces. He wrote, 'What next? Free them and make them
politically and socially our equals? Our feelings will not admit of this, and if mine
would, we know that those of the great mass of whites will not. Whether this feeling
accords with justice and sound judgement is not the sole question, if indeed it is any
part of it. A universal feeling, whether well or ill founded, cannot be safely
disregarded. We cannot then make them equals' (Sandberg, vol. 2, p. 14). On another
occasion, Lincoln said, 'All I ask for the negro is that, if you do not like him, let him
alone. If God gave him little, that little let him enjoy' (p. ). And again, as to all men
being born equal: 'Certainly the negro is not our equal in colour perhaps not in many
other respects; still, in the right to put in his mouth the bread that his own hands have
earned, he is equal to every other man, white or black. In pointing out that more has been
given you, you cannot be justified in taking away the little which has been given him' (p.
). You may say that it is easy to patronise people who lived before our enlightened times.
Let's look, then, at a recent Nobel Prize-winner, that nice man who wrote King
Soloman's Ring and had the little greylag goslings running after him, believing him to
be their mother as a result of biological 'imprinting'. Konrad Lorenz was one of the
founders of ethology, the scientific study of animal behaviour, the gentlest of the
behavioural sciences. I turn to the Austrian scientist's contribution to the Sixteenth
Congress of the German Psychological Association in 1938. He is addressing the section on
'Character', subsection 'Heredity': 'This high valuation of our species-specific and
innate social behavior patterns is of the greatest biological importance. In it as in
nothing else lies directly the backbone of all racial health and power. Nothing is so
important for the health of a whole Volk as the elimination of "invirent types":
those which, in the most dangerous, virulent increase, like the cells of a malignant
tumor, threaten to penetrate the body of a Volk' (quoted in Kalikow, 1978, p. 174).
Two years later, he wrote, 'If there should be mutagenic factors. their
recognition and elimination would be the most important task of those who protect the
race, because the continuing possibility of the novel appearance of people with
deficiencies in species-specific social behavior patterns constitutes a danger to Volk and
race which is more serious than that of a mixture with foreign races. The latter is at
least knowable as such and, after a one-time elimination of breeding, is no longer to be
feared. If it should turn out, on the other hand, that under the conditions of
domestication no increase in mutations takes place, but the mere removal of natural
selection causes the increase in the number of existing mutants and the imbalance of the
race, then race-care must consider an even more stringent elimination of the ethically
less valuable than is done today, because it would, in this case, literally have to
replace all selection factors that operate in the natural environment. (p. 176). Once one
penetrates the verbiage, one finds oneself in the midst of fascist ideology, linked to
ominous social measures to achieve racial purity by eugenic means.
Where have we got to? First, racism has no natural basis in biological
science, except to the extent that racist biologists put it there. It is social, economic,
ideological and psychological, with its proximate roots deeply sedimented in the
unconscious. Second, psychoanalysis is a racist society will be racist, or at least very
selective in the aspects of racism its writers are likely to take up. Third, being
enlightened and scientific is no guarantee against racism in the past or present. It is
embedded in the culture.
I now want to revert to the literature. Over the years I have developed
some skill in finding my way around the literature on topics which interest me. It takes
time, but one can get, from footnotes and references and scanning runs of journals, more
than one needs to provide a basis for reflecting on a topic in the light of the best
writings. Never, never before have I come up with so little, and much of what I hasve
found isn't much use. I am referring to the psychoanalytic literature. As I've said, it's
pathetic. If one turns to novels, oral tradition, cultural studies, films and music, it's
another story.
I want to touch now on certain themes - tools my reading has given me
for further work. I wont presume to outline Franz Fanon's Black Skin, White Mask, John Dollard's Caste and Class in a Southern Town, Rae Sherwood's The
Psychodynamics of Race, Michael Banton's Racial Theories, Gunnar Myrdal's An
American Dilemma: the Negro Problem and Modern Democracy or the useful collection, Anatomy
of Racism, edited by David Goldberg. There is a growing literature on the psychology
of blacks and various accounts of the holocaust and holocaust victims. There is also a
very helpful literature on Native American 'Indians' in which Dee Brown's account from
inside the Indian experience, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, is complemented by a
fascinating historical account of white projections - The White Man's Indian: Images of
the American Indian from Columbus to the Present by Robert F. Berkhofer, Jr. A small
number of books - mostly fiction have done as much as my own experience to provide what
understanding I do have of these matters: Lillian Smith's Strange Fruit and Killers
of the Dream, Alan Paton's Too Late the Phalarope, Alice Walker's The Colour
Purple and Toni Morrison's practically unbearably moving Beloved., as well as
her more recent novel, Jazz.
There are lessons to be learned from the prehistory of racism. Basil
Davidson says this: 'What did Europeans think about black people before the rise of
racism? How did they estimate the values of black humanity? There are countless
indications in the pictorial arts. Think only of the noble portraits of the black monarch
among the three kings who journeyed to salute the birth of Christ. Think of the work of
the great masters of the Renaissance who painted black persons. Think of Rembrandt,
Velasquez, many more. Each of them, without exception, painted black persons from the same
standpoint as they painted white persons, whether either of these, white or black, were
kings or merchants or ambassadors or servants' (Davidson, 1987, p.12). Davidson makes
these remarks in the context of favourably reviewing a remarkable tour de force, Black
Athena: The Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization by Martin Bernal, in which the
author draws on a wide range of classes of evidence to show that the very notion of Aryan
purity contained in our idea of the classical Greeks was a social construct, created by
late-eighteenth and nineteenth-century scholars to provide a pedigree for their notions of
European racial superiority. In fact, he argues, ancient Greek society was contributed to
by numerous African and Asiatic strains and was far from 'pure'. Here is a striking
instance of the rewriting of history for racist purposes, which is rebutted by a scholar
who is dedicated to a different vision of humanity: racist vs anti-racist scholarship.
The two writers on racism whom I have found most helpful are Joel Kovel
and Eugene Victor Wolfenstein. Both are Marxists, and both say again and again that we
must never lose sight of the economic and social interests being served and mediated by
racism. They see racism as false consciousness at the social level, scapegoating and
rationalisation at the individual. It is not sui generis and is always a mediation
of socio-economic issues. What is unique about it is its virulence - the sheer psychotic
permissiveness of racist feelings and the actions to which they lead. Kovel uses the same
argument about splitting and the scapegoated role of the largely projected Other in his
writings on nuclear terror in the service of virulent nationalism. I'll sketch some of the
fruits of their analyses.
The key to any attempt to keep economic and social interests in the
forefront of our understanding is to try to think dialectically. Things do not only
interact: they mutually interpenetrate at many levels; they are mutually constitutive.
According to Wolfenstein the key to the dialectic in this matter is a version of Harold
Laswell's formula for understanding the inner and the outer. Laswell argued that private
motives get displaced onto public objects and are then rationalised in terms of the public
interest. Wolfenstein, an historian as well as a psychoanalyst, wants to start the story
at an earlier point and says that 'Political interests are first reflected into the public
sphere, then internalised as character structure and only subsequently displaced into the
public realm' (Wolfenstein, 1989, pp. 17-18).
For Wolfenstein, the concept of race manages to obscure both the
genuine public issues and the mediation of them through unconscious processes. Hence,
racial conflict precludes and obscures class issues and class conflict. Potentially
subversive or revolutionary energies get deflected by the lightning rod of the racial
object (Wolfenstein, 1977, p. 178). Racism itself is an illusion of a naturally determined
social differentiation between racial collectives which serves to justify a particularly
violent relationship of domination and subordination. If we adopt his position it becomes
clear that slavery was not born of racism but that racism was the consequence of slavery
and its sequellae brown, white, black, yellow, Italian, Chinese, Irish and so on. The
economic and social relationship comes first and finds plenty of scope for mediation
through human psychic processes. According to Banton, the first evidence of English racism
lay in the eighteenth century among Barbados planters who found it convenient to describe
their slave workers as beasts without souls. Slavery came first; racism was its
rationalisation.
As Kovel tells it, those dark-skinned Africans were treated as
descendants of Ham, the son of Noah. According to the Bible, Ham looked upon his
father naked and had failed to cover the old man, though his brothers had done so. Ham's
punishment was that his son Chus (or Canaan) and all his descendants would be black and
would be banished from his sight. The crime of Ham - as the Hebraic and early Christian
commentators understood perfectly well - was not merely disrespect. It was the castration
of the father - the violent rejection of paternal authority and the acquisition of the
father's sexual choice. The blackening and banishing of Ham's progeny is the retaliatory
castration by the higher Father, God.
What is black and banished cannot be seen. The long-term consequence of
this was, according to Fanon, that in Europe, that is to say, in every civilised and
civilising country, the Negro is the symbol of sin. Whatever is forbidden and horrifying
in human nature gets designated as black and projected onto a man whose dark skin and
oppressed past fit him to receive the symbols. The id becomes the referent of blackness
within the personality, and the various trends within the id make themselves realised in
the world as the forms of blackness embodied in the fantasies of race (Kovel, 1988, pp.
63-66).
Once again, Wolfenstein points out that the relationship remains
dialectical. It grips the oppressor and the oppressed. In his excellent biography of
Malcolm X (the best book on racism I have read), Wolfenstein spells out the relationship
as follows: 'Stating the point more generally, we may say the Negro identity (like any
other externally imposed and therefore stereotypically limited identity) is a
character-form of group-emotion, determined through the mediation of identification
with the oppressor. conscience and consciousness are both whitened out, and blackness
becomes firmly attached to unacceptable, predominantly aggressive, infantile emotional
impulses. Black people and white people alike come to have a character-structure in which
the I, including the moral I, is white, and the It is black. Within this relationship,
black people can think of themselves as fully human only by denying their true racial
identity, while white people secure their humanity only at the price of black
dehumanisation. Thus the concept of the emotional-group here emerges in the form of a dominating-dominated intergroup relationship. In this relationship the repressed
sadistic tendencies of the dominating group become the self-hatred, the masochistic
tendency, of the dominated group. Conversely, the alienated self-esteem of the dominated
group becomes the narcissism of the dominating one. And through the work of secondary
elaboration or rationalisation, the members of both groups are held firmly in the grip of
a stereotypical false consciousness' (Wolfenstein, 1989, p. 145). (Please note, once
again, that, mutatis mutandis, this set of mutual projections exactly parallels
those which are characteristic of a bad but stable marriage).
Wolfenstein reminds us that this emotional process is determined by the
political and economic power of the ruling class and that 'Emotional alienation is
determined by and is the reproductive mediation of alienated labour'. Thus, by becoming a
Negro, 'Malcolm X was learning to play his part in capitalism's dumb show of racial
stereotypes, its dialectic of self-preservation' (p. 146).
Kovel says that racism, 'far from being a simple delusion of a bigoted
and ignorant minority, is a set of beliefs whose structure arises from the deepest levels
of our lives - from the fabric of assumptions we make about the world, ourselves and
others and from the patterns of fundamental social activities' (Kovel, l988, p. 3). The
racial Other is the negation of the socially-affirmed self (p. xxix). We reduce the racial
object to an alien Other - not me, not human, not clean, not inhibited, not civilised, not
whatever I cannot bear or allow in myself.
He breaks racism into a number of subdivisions. Dominative racism
is the direct oppressive relationship of the southern American states. Aversive racism is the exclusion and cold-shouldering of blacks in the northern states. Metaracism is the product of an economic and technocratic society. He describes the historical
transitions from dominative to aversive to metaracism as parallel to development from
slavery to feudalism to industrialisation.
The end of slavery and nominal desegregation have not improved certain
aspects of the lot of blacks in America. In the decades after the American Civil War there
were 4000 recorded lynchings of black people, who were often hung in groups on festive
occasions. The Ku Klux Klan was a respectable organisation to belong to. It was celebrated
in the first feature film, Birth of a Nation; Woodrow Wilson admired it, and a
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court was a one-time member. Moving ahead to recent times,
black incomes fell relatively between 1970 and 1980, and unemployment rose relatively by
five per cent, while that of young people reached fifty per cent. The chances of dying of
alcoholism are three times that of white people. The number of homicides is five times
that of whites. The number of blacks in prison is a multiple of their percentage of the
population. One quarter of young black men is in jail, on probation or otherwise under the
control of the law. A black man in Harlem has less chance of living to fifty than the
inhabitants of Bangladesh (Sunday Times 4 March 1990, p. A18). Similar misfortunes
apply to the relationship between black people and the British mental health services. A
black person is twice as likely as a white to be diagnosed as psychotic, to be locked away
against his or her will ('sectioned') and to be given drugs forcibly. The chance of being
hospitalised is three times that of a white person ('Hear Say', BBC 2, 28 Aug. l991).
The plight of the Native American 'Indian' is worse and has been
dreadful from the moment of 'discovery' of America. (The inverted commas refer to recent
recognition that non-European explorers had reached the Western World long before Columbus
did in 1492. See Carew, 1988). Colonialism and racism were integrally related from the
start and decimated red and black and then other peoples: 'Modern colonialism, which began
with the European rediscovery of the Americas de-civilised vast areas of the world. It
began with a holocaust against Native Americans, twelve million of whom died in the first
forty years of the Colombian era, continued against Africans, two hundred million of whom
were estimated to have died in the Atlantic slave trade, and then there were countless
deaths of Asian peoples as colonialism gained momentum' (Carew, 1988a, p.38). These
figures do not include the march West of the American Frontier, which completed the
devastation of the Native American way of life. This has been called the longest
undeclared war in hisrtory. The scale of this carnage was unprecedented in world history.
Learned Catholic theologians decreed in 1503 that the permission of
Queen Isabella should be given for slavery in the New World, and a degraded view of the
natives was a prerequisite, as was a promise of salvation: 'Being as they are hardened in
their hard habits of idolatry and cannibalism, it was agreed that I should issue this
decree... I hereby give licence and permission... to capture them... paying us the share
that belongs to us, and to sell them and utilise their services, without incurring any
penalty thereby, because if the Christians bring them to these lands and make use of their
service, they will be more easily converted and attracted to our Holy Faith' (ibid., p.
48). The European charge of cannibalism was unfounded. Harmless and helpful natives were
badmouthed as wild and bestial, thus legitimating the activities of a master race. The
savagery of the conquistadors was projected onto their victims, who could then be seen as
subhuman and could be treated in subhuman ways - which they extravagantly were.
The ensuing carnage was chronicled by a contemporary observer,
Bartolomé de Las Casas, who observed that the Indians 'had a greater disposition towards
civility than the European people', yet it was 'upon such people that the Spaniards fell
as tigers, wolves and lions fall upon lambs and kids. Forty years they ranged those lands,
massacring the wretched Indians until in the land of Espanola, which in 1492 had a
population estimated at three millions of people, scarcely three hundred Indians remained
to be counted. The history of Espanola is the history of Cuba, San Juan [Puerto Rico], and
Jamaica. Thirty islands in the neighbourhood of San Juan were entirely depopulated. On the
side of the continent, kingdom after kingdom was desolated, tribe after tribe
exterminated. Twelve millions of Indians in those continental lands perished under the
barbarous handling of the Spaniards. Their property was no more secure than their lives.
For greed of gold, ornaments were torn from neck and ear, and as the masked burglar
threatens his victim until he reveals the hiding-place of this store, the Indians were
subjected to the most cruel tortures to compel the disclosure of mines which never existed
and the location of gold in streams and fields in which the Almighty has never planted it.
Obedience secured no better treatment than sullenness, faithful service no better reward
than that which followed treachery. The meanest Spaniard might violate the family of the
most exalted chief, and home had no sanctity in the bestial eyes of the soldier. The
courtiers rode proudly through the streets of the New Isabella, their horses terrifying
the poor Indians while their riders shook their plumed heads and waved their glistening
swords. As they rode along, their lances were passed into women and children, and no
greater pastime was practised by them then wagering as to a cavalier's ability to
completely cleave a man with one dextrous blow of his sword. A score would fall before one
would drop in the divided parts essential to winning the wager. No card or dice afforded
equal sport. Another knight from Spain must sever his victim's head from the shoulder at
the first sweep of his sword. Fortunes were lost on the ability of a swordsman to run an
Indian through the body at a designated spot. Children were snatched from their mother's
arms and dashed against the rocks as they passed. Other children they threw into the water
that the mothers might witness their drowning struggles. Babes were snatched from their
mothers' breasts, and a brave Spaniard's strength was tested by his ability to tear an
infant into two pieces by pulling apart its tiny legs. And the pieces of the babe were
then given to the hounds that in their hunting they might be the more eager to catch their
prey. The pedigree of a Spanish bloodhound had nothing prouder in its record than the
credit of half a thousand dead or mangled Indians. Some natives they hung on gibbets, and
it was their reverential custom to gather at a time sufficient victims to hang thirteen in
a row, and thus piously to commemorate Christ and the Twelve Apostles. Moloch must have
been in the skies... I have been an eye-witness of all these cruelties, and an infinite
number of others which I pass over in silence' (quoted in Carew, 1988a, pp. 48-9).
The condition of the Indian scarcely improved in subsequent centuries,
and in the nineteenth century the Americans all but completed their decimation, only to
wreak upon them another humiliation in the twentieth century in making dime novel and the
film western vehicles for symbolising the onward march of the white man's Frontier and the
trials of American manhood by once again treating the Noble Savage as wholly
ignoble and rapacious, thoroughly deserving treatment at the hands of endless paperback
cowboys and cinematic John Waynes which echoed, in long marches to alien reservations and
at the massacre at Wounded Knee (which sought to revenge Custer's Last Stand), the
behaviour of the Spaniards chronicled by Las Casas three centuries earlier (Slatta, 1990,
ch. 12; Buscombe, 1988; Las Casas, 1552). Offensive terms have found their way into common
parlance. For example, redskin is derived from bounty hunters who found it
burdensome to bring in whole bodies. They were allowed to flay their victims and deliver
their bloody skins in order to receive $60 for a mans and $40 for a womans.
Similarly, Indian names - including Redskins, Indians and Braves - are attached to white
sports teams, whose cheerleaders and fans dress up in ways that offend the Native
Americans and denigrate their heriitage.
There have been a few films which have sought to redress this
historical injustice, for example, 'Broken Arrow' (1950), which made a stand against
racism by portraying the hero, James Stewart, as sympathetic to the Indians. He lived
among them and married one. (It is no accident that the scriptwriter, Albert Maltz, was
jailed for refusing to testify to his political affiliations before the McCarthyite,
witch-hunting House Unamerican Activities Committee. Maltz was blacklisted for his
communist beliefs, so a friend put his name to the script, which won many prizes) In
'Hombre' (1966), Paul Newman's Indian values, hard as they are, are seen to show up the
hypocrisy of those who were supposed to care for Indians on reservations but who
ruthlessly stole from them. More recently, Kevin Cosner's 'Dances with Wolves' provides a
much-honoured homage to Native American culture, albeit at the expense of making the white
soldiers into wooden baddies, even though the reality would have been bad enough.
The connection between the Indians portrayed in Dances with
Wolves and their present-day descendants is indicated in an article about the film:
'Imagine you were a Native American, living on a reservation in Shannon County, South
Dakota where a century ago, your forbears were mown down by the Seventh Cavalry at Wounded
Knee. Firstly, you would be poor. Really ground down by poverty. Your place would be on
the bottom-most rung of the richest nation in the world. Blacks in Harlem slums and
Mississippi shanties would be better off than you. You would have had a substandard
education. You would be unlikely to have a job because your race faces a 75 per cent
unemployment rate. Much of your meagre welfare benefit probably goes on gambling and
drink. Your children are likely to be born crippled because their mother is an alcoholic.
Life expectancy would be below 50, the lowest in the United States' (Perry, 199l, p. 19).
Life expectancy of an Indian on a reservation is 45 years, alcoholism is the commonist
cause of death and Indians have the highest infant mortality, unemployment and rate of
drop-out from education of any group in America. The suicide rate is twice the national
average, and one sixth of Indian teenagers have attempted suicide.
These historical data help us to grasp the real human suffering which
lies behind Kovel's description of a rationalising process which he calls radical
dehumanisation. He describes the 'tracings of a primitive fantasy of dirt upon the more
advanced fantasy of Ham and Oedipus'. (p. ). In the history from slavery to the present,
the black man moves from being father to child to body to penis to faeces to inanimate
thing and finally to nothing - the invisible man of Ralph Ellison's novel. Along with the
debasement goes abstraction, until the final point of nothingness is reached. Once again,
the black person ceases to be considered as a human being. Kovel reminds us that when Mark
Twain's Huckleberry Finn accounted for his lateness to his Aunt Sally he invented an
accident aboard a riverboat: 'It wasn't the grounding - that didn't keep us back but a
little. We blowed out a cylinder head.' 'Good gracious: anybody hurt?' asked his aunt.
'No'm. Killed a nigger.' 'Well, it's lucky; because sometimes people do get hurt.'
The first appearance of the term 'race' in the English language
occurred in 1508 and linked it with unconscious forces. It appeared in a poem on the seven
deadly sins by a Scot named Dunbar who referred to those who followed envy as including
'bakbyttaris of sindry recis' (backbiters of sundry races; Banton, 1987, p. 1). If we look
at treatises on racism, we find them full of very primitive, Kleinian language. Here is a
list of terms I have extracted from a book on the psychoanalysis of racism which stresses
the projection of intrapsychic phenomena into the political and treats them largely in
terms of diseased or malignant internal objects: foreign bodies, germs, pollutants,
contaminants, malignancies, poisonous infections, gangrened limbs, dirty, suppurating,
verminous (Koenigsberg, 1977). This brings to mind the representation of Jews as gutter
rats in Nazi propaganda films and the rhetoric of competing political tendencies discussed
by Martin Thom in an article on projection in left sectarian rhetoric, in which opponents
were characterised as shitty, nauseating and their ideas as spew, vomit, etc. (Thom,
l978).
Sue and Ray Holland (1984) draw on Fairbairn's concept of splitting,
whereby good or accepted representations remain in the conscious after bad or rejected
part-objects and their affiliated bad part- self-representations are relegated to the
unconscious. 'The trouble with the rejected part-objects and part self-representations is
that, although relegated to the unconscious, they continue to find expression in the
behaviour and experience of the adult.' These problems can erupt in the couple
relationship, as many of us know to our cost. The Hollands adapt this model for describing
the depressions of white women in sexual relations with black men from certain colonial
cultures. One has here a microcosm of a racist society in the projections, degradations
and self-denigrations of these couples, which are inevitably passed on to their children
so that attempts at integration at an individual level also perpetuate dimensions of
racism in the very process of seeking to overcome it.
Wolfenstein develops his model into the wider group and applies it to
situations in which racism involves a leader. Hitler is the obvious example, but
Wolfenstein explores the interesting case of the leader of the Black Muslims, the
Honorable Elijah Muhammad. Here he adapts Freud's work on group psychology and describes
how the member of the sect projects unconscious hostility, felt towards the parents, onto
the leader, who authorises its displacement from himself and group members and onto the
designated racial enemy. This model is repression leading to projection leading
to displacement. He describes racist organisations as dreams, outlets or modes of
escape for repressed longings and for specifically irrational unconscious desires
(Wolfenstein, 1977, p. l72).
The alien group is perceived as a sexual as well as an aggressive
threat. The alien male is a rapacious devil, the female a seductive witch. 'Thus, the
image of the racial enemy as a crystallisation of aggressively dominated or limited sexual
tendencies. It is formed through the projection and displacement of the group member's
infantile self, of the sadistic child who survives within even the most compassionate
adult. From which it follows that intra-group life is freed from the pressures of
unwelcome infantile sexuality, so that it takes on the character of a relatively
aim-inhibited relationship. And if we now translate this conception into the somewhat
slippery structural language of psychoanalysis, we may state that the group is to the
enemy as ego is to id (as potentially conscious self is to the alienated or
unconscious-repressed self), while the group itself is the "number of individuals who
have put the same object in the place of their ego ideal and have consequently identified
themselves with one another in their ego"' (Wolfenstein, 1977, p. 173, quoting
Freud's Group Psychology).
I want to turn from those theoretical explorations to current and
personal experience. Racism is all around us and in all of us. I once read that spy
thrillers chose East Germans as villains, because they were both Krauts and Commies and
North Koreans, because they are both slant-eyed and Commies. The final twist to all this,
of course, is racist mocking of anti-racism. Race and Class has provided analyses
of racist writings in The Sun newspaper, including stories about London boroughs.
Harringey is supposed to have proscribed black dustbin liners and to have spent 50,000
pounds on superloos for gypsy travellers, while Brent and Islington are said to have
banned the children's rhyme 'Baa Baa Black Sheep'. Of course, none of these stories was
accurate, some were conjured out of thin air, all were misleading and the 'Baa Baa Black
Sheep' one began life as a rumour in a pub. All of this mockingly juxtaposes the ludicrous
aliens and their silly do-gooder supporters, on the one hand, with the idealised,
homogeneous, organic and otherwise idyllic indigenous white culture, on the other. Alfred
Sherman (who was criticised for wanting to bring a French fascist to a Tory conference)
feared 'a Procrustean pidgin culture' might 'be imposed on majorities and minorities
alike' and deemed this a recipe for 'cultural genocide', which 'in effect outlawed the
concept of the English nation'. Mary Kenny thought certain anti-racist proposals would
turn 'mild British people into resentful misanthropes... as they see everything native to
their own traditions scuttled' (Murray, 1986, p.12).
These quotations bring racism out of the realm of high theory and into
our own immediate culture. It is also much in the news as a result of the demise of the
Soviet empire. Removal of Soviet hegemony has led to a flowering of nationalism, including
persecution of local and adjacent minorities, as well as Jews, who are emigrating to
Israel in large numbers, only to become part of a Middle East which is itself immersed in
the hatreds and degradations of mutual projections and attempted decimation.
I turn now to my own experience. I cannot say how I learned to
persecute Jews and find Catholics oddly different. The first and only person I was caught
in bed with (aged five) was a Catholic, and the same was true of my sister (as a
teenager). Both of us were criticised in ways that intertwined our sexual misbehaviour
with an accusation that, looking back, made us feel as though we'd committed
miscegenation. I later had one Catholic girlfriend in my own neighbourhood but was
threatened with violence by boys from the local parochial school. The same thing happened
when I was a life guard at a working class swimming pool, where I was threatened with
maiming by local Catholic boys. In each case the girlfriend broke off the relationship to
protect me. I am sure that my sister's eventual conversion to Catholicism was partly a
rebellion, as was my marrying a Jew.
I had a close Catholic friend, though, and we were part of the
neighbourhood persecution of a boy whose only discernible deviance was going to Hebrew
School. He, like others after him, was called 'hebe' and chased home, just as they were
called 'kike' and mocked behind their backs and imitated in funny accents. Any sign of
meanness led to a nose being stroked and an accusation of being a member of 'the Tribe'.
Jewish girls came to our teenage dances; one was elected a Company Queen for an R.O.T.C.
(cadet corp) dance, but that led to lots of teasing. Jewish girls, no matter how wealthy
or eminent their parents, disappeared from the dances as soon as it was time for debuts to
be made into polite society, and no Jews were members of the 'best' country clubs.
There were other retrospectively notable silences and absences. I
recall only one working class child in my suburb and school, and he did not stay long. No
Mexicans, Chinese, Japanese, Indians, East or Red. And especially no blacks. I never swam
in a pool or attended school with a black person until I was eighteen. I never slept under
the same roof with one until I was twenty and involved in a Quaker summer project in a
mental hospital in another state. I never had a black adult friend until I was in my
mid-thirties.
Even so, I think I can date my first awareness of racism. When I was
five, my mother simply told me one day that I was no longer to play with my best friend.
He was black, lived in the servants' quarters of a neighbour's house, and he and I pranced
up and down the local alleyways playing drums (mine was an Indian tom-tom). I asked why
and was told that it was because he was a Negro. I protested and cried and felt terrible,
but I obeyed - after a relatively small number of spankings - with an astonishing
deference that did not apply to other aspects of my parents' authoritarianism.
One particularly cruel irony in all this - and it is true of many a
southern American and southern African white - is that I received the only reliable
security in my childhood and youth from black women. This extends from my earliest
memories until I left home to go to university - deep, abiding, patient, enfolding,
caring. Always there and always clear, whereas my parents were either not there or
preoccupied with depression, disappointment, bitterness and bigotry. Ask me about
childhood care, and you will hear about Odalee, Jessie, Ella May, Sadie (whose surnames I
never knew) and Lucy Wilkerson. Stout and loving, neglecting their own children for my
sister and me. Lucy worked for my family for nearly forth years and died their servant.
And yet - here is how deep racism cuts - she played practically no part
in many years of daily psychoanalysis. Nor have I properly mourned her death. When my
mother died, her black nurse, Linda Roberts, was not invited back to the customary family
gathering after the funeral. It was she who had been there in Mother's worst period, after
my father died.
I suppose that it is inevitable that this recitation may be found
self-indulgent, even offensive. I am raising the question of what enlightenment my own
decades of anti-racist work have brought. The answer is practically none at the deeper
levels, although I can claim to behave well, on the whole. What I am trying to
establish, using the only example I know well, is something about another area of silence
- the racism of the inner world of supposedly decent people, even - and especially - the
inner worlds of active anti-racists. I continue to think that black men are blessed with
enviable sexual endowments, have greater potency and make better lovers, that black women
are more generous and voluptuous. I have at one time or another - almost always silently
in my adult years - despised 'Japs', hated Germans, thought of Latin Americans as
unreliable, been embarrassed by Mediterranean wailing, thought of Arabs as fanatics,
smiled at Mexicans tardiness, regarded Asians as children, and (just as the racist
Professor Darlington says) noticed the smells of other cultural groups and found them
alien. I have found myself thinking of friends, respected colleagues and lovedones as
'behaving in a Jewish way'. I have reactions to Italians, Pakistanis, Irish people...
there is no end to it. I could go on and on about all of this - all contrary to my
beliefs, efforts and practices. It is still there, layered over by belief and civility but
pristine and unreconstructedly primitive.
My Jewish mother-in-law once told my wife that 'He will always think of
you as a little Jewess'. She was perfectly right. The fact that there were also
idealisations mixed in with anti-semitism only makes the problem more complex, as does the
fact that two of my children are Jews and two others have Jewish ancertry.
What can we do about all of this? I don't think it would suffice to
despise me and notice that by ventilating I am trying to assuage my guilt as well as
indulge my racism. I venture to say that, allowing for different cultural experiences, I
speak for a great many people, including members of oppressed groups, whose racism I am
not competent to explore. My point is that it is second nature, and there's the
rub. Second nature is history, culture and personal experience disguised as first nature
or biology. Indeed, as we have seen, the intellectual racist calls it biology. But it is
not first nature or biology. I said above that racism cuts deep. I'd now like to change
the image. It is that deeply sedimented by the culture, so deeply embedded that it is not
amenable to excision, no matter how enlightened one's subsequent beliefs and practices may
be.
My father - with whom I had a terrible relationship - held most of the
available bigotries of the regions he lived in, Alabama Washington and Texas: toward
blacks (though he was called a kind master), toward Jews (some of his best friends were),
toward Catholics (ditto, though he never forgave my sister), toward Latin Americans (he
was honorary consul for two South American countries). But he was a howling bigot. He once
told me that all priests are homosexuals and all nuns are lesbians and that there are
tunnels between the monasteries and convents. When I pointed out that he could hold any
two of those beliefs but not all three, he said, 'Oh, yeah, you went to college' (so did
he and taught in one). When I told the story to my sister, she burst out crying and said
that the awful thing is that he really believed what he'd said, no matter how patently
absurd it was.
My point in telling this anecdote is that there is only a difference in
embedding and surface behaviour between his racism and mine. If this is the case, and if I
am not merely an unreconstructed racist who is trying to pass as a decent person and
rationalise my bad parts, then what are we to do? The insight that says we accuse others
of that which we fear in ourselves, while true, is only a small beginning. It is, I
suppose, progress to move from being an active racist to being a less active one and even
to work on anti-racist projects. But how can the deep embedding of second nature be
scraped away, even if this has to be done millimetre by millimetre?
I will close with two thoughts. First, no amount of 'race awareness
training' will cathart away something that is so deeply set in the foundations of
cultures. This makes the erection and enforcement of laws and conventions of good
behaviour all the more important, because what is bad and underneath will not easily go
away. We must be liberal in the public sphere and radical in our knowledge of the deeper
issue. Second, I want to return to the dialectic - the deep, mutually constitutive
interrelations between the racist and the oppressed. What binds them together is not only
the worst aspects of human nature - aspects that may well be ineradicable.
What makes these destructive aspects take the specific form of racism
is historically contingent, and at the root of that contingency is the social and economic
organisation of the world that gives order to consent along the lines of economic and
nationalistic relationships which are specific to our own age. These are not set in
unchippable stone. They are solid but mutable. When we seek to address racism
psychoanalytically, we will get nowhere (nor will we with respect to any other matter)
unless we grasp and seek to redirect the social, cultural, economic and geopolitical
forces which lead our nastiness to take this particularly horrid form. Then, perhaps, we
can replace the loud silence with the sounds of scraping and chipping away at our own ways
of shaping the thantic side of human nature.
All of this takes me back to Freud's pessimism. He pointed out - and
Kleinians have been even more sombre about this - that the psychotic and rapacious parts
of human nature are kept at bay only by constant effort and that they are omnipresent in
phantasy and ever-ready to erupt if sublimation and guilt fail in their work. Racism,
then, is not something alien, a throwback. It is the omnipresence of primitive processes,
let out of their cage by thanatic social, cultural, political, ideological and related
forces in nominally civilised communities.
I grew up in a highly-cultured, dropsically wealthy, suburb (the very
one where the 'Dallas' television soap opera was set), but it was racist throughout, with
a black and Mexican servant class, and people with whom I worked at a nearby Ford assembly
plant were at thast time active members of the Ku Klux Clan. The emotions and actions we
find in racism are part of our own mental worlds, relatively unaltered by the history of
the civil rights movement. What has altered, however, is the frequency of violently acting
out such feelings, and the means of legal redress have also grown.
Even so, as I write, the Sunday paper reports a race riot in Brooklyn
between blacks and orthodox, Lubavitcher Jews. 'The Reverend Al Sharpton, a veteran of
these occasions, demanded the arrest of the driver of the car', a Hasidic Jew who had
struck and killed a black child, 'and the appointment of a special prosecutor. The rotund
preacher denounced the Hasidic Jews as "diamond merchants" and held several of
his trademark "Day of Outrage" demonstrations.
'For once, though, Sharpton - who was immortalised as The Rev. Bacon in
Tom Wolfe's The Bonfire of the Vanities - found himself outflanked by more radical
voices. Sonny Carson, a self-styled urban guerrilla, who leads a group called X-clan
[after Malcolm X], demanded more action on the streets...
'At the funeral of the black child last week, Carson talked of a white
plot to destroy black America. "The conspiracy is widespread. I've just come back
from Milwaukee. In Milwaukee, they are eating us," he declared in an apparent
reference to white serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer, most of whose victims were black' (Sunday
Times 1 Sept. 1991).
We have here an accident, involving an innocent child, interpreted by
two opposing forms of highly-articulated sectarian, separatist groups, one calling it
deliberate, a fat charismatic leader, a self-styled guerrilla, imputed diamond-based
wealth, allegations of a genocidal conspiracy and the cannibalism of blacks by a
self-confessed white serial killer. Projective identification of split-off and
utterly primitive parts are here run riot but based on oppressive inequalities in the heat
of summer.
I do not have any wish to claim that life is better for the racially
oppressed in economic and social terms. I do say, however, that it is that veneer of
civilization we must attend to and not pretend that we can wish or liberalise the feelings
away. They are part of what dwells in our inner worlds, inhabitants of our mental space -
part of everyday human nature, just below the surface, awaiting the appropriate social and
economic conditions to erupt again, with undimmed destructive virulence. That is the
lesson of the riot and of recent international relations. Eternal vigilance is the price
of civilization. If you take the army away, you'd better have some civil forces at the
ready, or humanity will revert to its primitive projective and scapegoating mechanisms. A
pity, but it's best to know what we are up against. De-repression is utterly dangerous
unless civil society is strong.
This is a revised version of a talk given to a conference on
Psychoanalysis and Racism, sponsored by the Association of Child
Psychotherapists, London, October 1987. It will (one day, I hope) appear in a collection
of essays which I am editing: Racism and Psychoanalysis: The Psychosocial
Construction of Inferiority, to be published by Process Press.
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© The Author
Address for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Roasd, London N7 9RQ
email: robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
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