Nadia Bou Ali: The non-liberal Freud
Ego, Repression, and the Telos
of progress
The contemporary critique of liberalism - as articulated by Wendy Brown - hinges
on a non-dialectical logic: the antinomy of culture versus liberalism is resolved by singling out a 'culture of liberalism'.
Added to this synthesis we have another level of confusion: an argument that calls for the affirmation of organicist culture
(conceived as liberalism's Other, a new nature) posited against liberal culture.
What is emerging
in the liberal critiques of liberalism is a strange renewed opposition between nature and culture, and it is none other than
Freudian psychoanalysis that is strangely singled out as promulgating this oppressive distinction. Brown maintains in her
reading of Freud that the account of the progress of civilization that he provides, vis-à-vis civilization as what emerges
from sublimation or repression, assumes a telos of progress from primary 'organicist identities-groups-to civilized individuals'.
The main liberal assertion that she singles out in Freud, across the spectrum of his works, is that of an 'analytical a priori
individualism' and a colonial account of individualism: the lone savage and primitive tribalist. In Brown's account, Freud
appears to have confirmed the nature/culture dualism of liberal thought by turning the problem inwards: the ego is the site
of conflict between primitive, instinctual, infantile forces on one hand, and individuation and rationality on the other.
The talk will critique Brown's reading and argue for the potency of Freud and psychoanalysis for analysing the fantasy of
individual autonomy in liberal regimes today.