Strangely enough, Adam Phillips and I are in rough agreement
about Freud and his enterprise.
Phillips is, the New Yorker’s Joshua Rothman explains, the
most famous contemporary psychoanalyst. He has written a new book called Becoming Freud whose appearance
corresponds nicely with the appearance of my book The Last Psychoanalyst.
Rothman is too nice to say it, but Phillips is writing
hagiography, the life of a secular saint.
But, Rothman is correct to call it a salvage operation.
Phillips is trying to rescue some bits and pieces of the Freudian enterprise
from their current descent into desuetude:
[His
book is] a revisionist history of Freud and his enterprise; its implicit goal,
never stated but always clear, is to help us salvage the best parts of Freud’s
work while leaving behind the rest—the outmoded theories and unwieldy jargon
that make Freud a caricature rather than an intriguing thinker.
Outmoded theories and unwieldy jargon… aren’t they the basis
for the Freudian enterprise? Clearly, Phillips has set himself a daunting task.
As did I, Phillips does not recount the history of
psychoanalysis. He tells its story, all the while identifying the story with
Freud:
Anyway,
[Philips] thinks, the most important story about Freud’s life is
psychoanalysis—that’s the
story Freud himself chose to tell the rest of us about our lives and his.
Of course, Freud himself was a central character in the
story of psychoanalysis. He was the alpha analyst, the unmoved mover. To tell
the story without talking about Freud makes it appear that Phillips is trying
to hide something.
When I told the story, I did not belabor Freud’s biography,
but I did not exclude it. After all, psychoanalysis was not merely an academic
discipline. It was a clinical practice. It should answer for outcomes it
produced for patients. We cannot hold it accountable without knowing something about what it did for Freud and what it did for his patients.
Being a psychoanalyst Phillips ignores all of that to focus
on Freud’s desires. Nothing could be more Freudian. And yet, when you are
consulting with a mental professional, would you prefer to know what he desires
or to benefit from treatment.
Emphasizing desire is Freudian, but it is also a ruse,
designed to deflect your judgment away from clinical outcomes.
Phillips explains it in his own way:
… whatever
story we are telling, we are always also telling the story of our own wanting …
at any moment in Freud’s life we can ask, encouraged and legitimated by his own
work, what is Freud wanting from psychoanalysis? What is the pleasure he seeks?
What is he doing it for and what is it doing to him? What about himself is he
seeking to sustain and enjoy, and what would he prefer to ignore?
Here Phillips affirms a point I argued at great length in my
book. Psychoanalysis was not so much about what it could do for the mentally
ill. It was about what it could do for Freud.
Phillips and I agree that psychoanalysis is not about curing
anyone of anything. His view, which I do not share, is that it is about
sociability and communication.
Rothman summarizes the point:
If
there’s a big idea in “Becoming Freud,” it’s that psychoanalysis is about
communication—about what Phillips calls “sociability”—more than it’s about a
cure. It’s a way of helping people speak for themselves (or of helping them
figure out how they are already speaking).
Unfortunately, this is not true.
Psychoanalysts and their patients do not communicate. The
basis for treatment is the peculiar form of non-communication called free
association.
Analysts are notably silent; they give their patients the
silent treatment. This is traumatizing and has nothing to do with normal human
communication.
Believing that thinking out loud allows you to communicate
more effectively is an error. It might encourage you toward emotional
incontinence and tactlessness, but it is an asocial non-link and cannot make
you more sociable.
Yet, I agree with Phillips that the basis for the Freudian
project lies in its wish to help people to recreate themselves as different
kinds of beings. Since Freud believed that people were living in a fiction—the
story of Oedipus—he wanted to help them to embrace that truth and to make
themselves into better fictional characters.
Phillips explains that Freud discovered:
… just how ingenious and disturbing modern
people had become as the unconscious artists of their own lives. It was their
capacities for representation—for finding ways and means for making their
desires known in however disguised or self-defeating forms; as dreams, or
slips, or perverse and neurotic symptoms—that had impressed Freud … His
patients, Freud realized, were working on and at their psychic survival, but
like artists not like scientists; and their material was their personal history
encoded in their sexuality. They were not empiricists, or only fleetingly; they
were fantasists. Their adaptations were ingeniously imaginative, however
painful; but they were stuck. Their symptoms were the equivalent of writer’s
block, or rather, speaker’s block. Indeed, Freud was becoming their new kind of
good listener, and their champion; someone who could get, who could make
something of, their strange ways of speaking. Someone who, like a good parent,
or a good art critic, could appreciate what they were up to, what they could
make, and make a case for it.
I suspect that Phillips would agree with me that Freud wanted
his patients to become better and more competent artists, to create themselves
anew as characters in a strange new fictional world, a world that Freud himself
had created.
Rothman explains that Phillips sees the story of psychoanalysis
ending tragically. In that it merely replicates the story of Oedipus:
In
fact, in Phillips’s view, the story of psychoanalysis has a tragic end. He
thinks Freud was a victim of his own success. In the beginning, like a good
critic, Freud let his patients own their mysteries. But, as psychoanalysis
became an institution unto itself and developed its own rules and dogmas,
analysts began to talk over their patients.
By my rendering, that was not the end of the story. My book
takes the next step and explains how the French psychoanalyst, Jacques Lacan
arrived on the scene in order to redeem Freud’s errors, to fulfill the theory
and to transform a clinical enterprise into a full-blown
pseudo-religion.
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