

Noëlle McAfee, "Fear of Breakdown: Psychoanalysis and Politics" (Columbia UP, 2019)
8 snips Jul 11, 2025
Noëlle McAfee, a Professor of Philosophy at Emory University, discusses her book, exploring how fears of societal breakdown affect democracy. She highlights the challenges of emotional engagement in political discourse and the necessity of embracing uncertainty. McAfee emphasizes the importance of honest communication in fostering intimacy and bridging divides, while also tackling the psychological relief that comes from overcoming fear and demonization. Additionally, she critiques traditional psychoanalytic theories surrounding mourning and its chaotic intertwining with human destructiveness.
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Fear of Breakdown in Politics
- Fear of breakdown is often a fear of something that has already happened but was too painful to acknowledge then.
- This fear underpins political nostalgia like Trump's 'Make America Great Again' slogan, reflecting a desire to avoid present collapse by idealizing the past.
Redefining Politics and Democracy
- Politics is the practice of deciding what to do amid disagreement and uncertainty, not just coercion or power struggles.
- Democracy is a broad practice where all affected participate in shaping decisions, embracing plurality and difference.
Engage Politics with Openness
- Truly engaging in politics requires embracing difference and uncertainty rather than insisting on one's own way.
- Growing up politically means tolerating ambivalence and considering others' perspectives even when uncomfortable.