

Noëlle McAfee, "Fear of Breakdown: Psychoanalysis and Politics" (Columbia UP, 2019)
Jul 11, 2025
Noëlle McAfee, a philosophy professor and psychoanalytic studies director at Emory University, delves into the intersection of psychoanalysis and politics. She discusses the significance of speaking over writing in psychoanalysis, emphasizing democracy's demand for tolerating differences and uncertainties. McAfee explores how emotional resistance affects political discourse and the complexities of engaging with opposing views. By analyzing concepts like mourning, aggression, and ideological divides, she highlights the psychological dimensions influencing our democratic practices.
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Fear of Breakdown Explained
- Fear of breakdown means fearing a disaster that has already happened but was too painful to acknowledge then.
- This psychological concept parallels political fears, like clinging to delusions of past greatness to avoid future collapse.
Redefining Politics and Democracy
- Politics is the practice of deciding what to do amid disagreement and uncertainty without a single right answer.
- Democracy means all affected have power to shape decisions about common concerns, not just the powerful few.
Grow Up to Engage Politics
- To engage genuinely in democratic politics, grow beyond black-and-white thinking and tolerate difference.
- Avoid childish demands; instead, consider and wrestle with others' points of view to deliberate effectively.