Inhabiting Implication in Racial Oppression and in Relational Psychoanalysis


Book Announcement by Rachel Kabasakalian-McKay (USA) and David Mark (USA)

What does it feel like to encounter ourselves and one another as implicated subjects, both in our everyday lives and in the context of our work as clinicians – and how does this matter?

With contributions from a diverse group of relational psychoanalytic thinkers, this Routledge title reads Michael Rothberg’s concept of the implicated subject – the notion that we are continuously implicated in injustices even when not perpetrators – as calling us to elaborate what it feels like to inhabit such subjectivities in relation to others both similarly and differently situated. Implication and anti-Black racism are central to many chapters, with attention given to the unique vulnerability of racial minority immigrants, to Native American genocide, and to the implication of ordinary Israelis in the oppression of Palestinians. The book makes the case that the therapist’s ongoing openness to learning of our own implication in enactments is central to a relational sensibility and to a progressive psychoanalysis.

As a contribution to the necessary and long-overdue conversation within the psychoanalytic field about racism, social injustice, and ways to move toward a just society, Rachel Kabasakalian-McKay and David Mark’s edited volume will be essential for all relational psychoanalysts and psychotherapists.

https://www.routledge.com/Inhabiting-Implication-in-Racial-Oppression-and-in-Relational-Psychoanalysis/Kabasakalian-McKay-Mark/p/book/9781032207704

Rachel Kabasakalian-McKay, Ph.D. (she/her) is a founding board member and Co-Director of the Institute for Relational Psychoanalysis of Philadelphia, is on faculty at the Stephen Mitchell Relational Study Center in New York, and teaches at the National Institute for the Psychotherapies (NIP). In addition to her focus on implication, she has written on empathy and recognition; the expansion of maternal subjectivity and thus enriched potential space made possible by Jessica Benjamin’s theory; and, with David Mark, the importance of the “intersubjective real.” She practices in New York and Philadelphia.

David Mark, Ph.D. is Co-Director of the Institute for Relational Psychoanalysis of Philadelphia. With Jeffrey Faude, he is the author of Psychotherapy of Cocaine Addiction: Entering the Interpersonal World of the Cocaine Addict (1997). Other writing of his has appeared in Contemporary PsychoanalysisPsychoanalytic Dialogues, and Psychoanalytic Perspectives.

Rachel Kabasakalian-McKay, Ph.D.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Email Rachel Kabasakalian-McKay

 

 

 

David Mark, Ph.D.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Email David Mark