Disability Psychoanalysis
Disability Psychoanalysis
Disability Psychoanalysis
Much of the reason why is psychoanalysis’ reliance on language and capacity for self-awareness
and reflection
Need for language, communication skills, memory, abstract reasoning, possibly basic literacy, to
be at the right place at the right time.
A word from the Author: “I want to suggest that our interest should lie not with the psyches of
disabled people (Priests, medics and psychiatrists have tried to own those for years) but with the
collective non-disabled psyche: the ways in which ‘non-disabled people and disablist culture
symbolise, characterise, construct, gaze at, project, split off, react, repress and direct images of
impairment and disability in ways that subjugate and, at times, terrorise disabled people whilst
upholding the precarious autonomy of non-disabled people’.”
For example: the psychological investments and emotional pay-offs that non-disabled people
experience in their ‘altruistic’ or ‘caring’ work as professionals, volunteers or carers
The widespread un/conscious fantasies and fears around disability and impairment in cultural
responses to disability.
We may as a culture, use the same defence mechanisms which we use as individuals to develop a
distinction of self from other.
Three Stories
You get that all the time people stare, people comment, or people … I would rather people said
to me, ‘What’s wrong?’ rather than just stare. Then you can hear them as soon as you walk past,
[whisper sounds]. (Jemma, mother of a disabled child reported in McLaughlin et al, 2008).
‘Don’t worry about paying love, we don’t charge for retards’ (comment from a fairground
assistant to the mother of a disabled child, from Goodley and Runswick Cole, 2010).
Kennedy (1996, p123) reports of a paediatrician who on examining a child with ‘hypnotonic
spastic quadriplegia’ (sic) found vaginal injuries, anal scars and a sexually transmitted disease.
He reported, ‘These symptoms could be due to an obscure syndrome’.
Development of splitting
As babies or very young children, we idealize our mother, who fulfils our needs and satisfies the
Id, making us the centre of the universe
As we grow and encounter situations where our mother is absent or does not meet our needs, we
being to develop a concept of the good and bad mother. This helps us to deal with the
contradiction that our mother is sometimes very present, helpful, and important, and sometimes
absent.
The good is nurturing and caring, and ensures that we remain the centre of the universe. The bad
is absent, and gives us the reality check that another cannot always be there for us, that we are
isolated and we will not be fused with another forever.
Growing ambivalence increases sense of own identity and creates guilt, mourning, and need fro
reparation. How can we hate someone we love so much?
As a culture we go through the same process. As pertaining to disabled people, this can be a
result of introjection (internalising desired aspects of the good life) and projection (externalizing
the bad, away from oneself, into another)
Nurture is valued and mourned, while at the same time, independence and mastery are both
valued and threatening (especially in a capitalist society): the dependence of the disabled creates
a split between desire and rejection.
This is stigmatizing as disabled people become the other the projection of our own fears and
vulnerability. “the fear and denial of our own vulnerability that causes us to hate and exploit the
vulnerability of others”
We identify an ‘other’ in society who we can devalue and attribute parts of our own experience
and selfhood which we wish to disown. Through this we reinforce ourselves as the opposite of
these unwanted characteristics.
“The cultural actor depicted in the writings of Lacan, is one struggling with and inevitably failing
to match up to the ideals often associated with ableist culture… Ableist society upholds the
imaginary autonomous citizen, promotes signifiers of ableist achievement, mastery and
competence in symbolic culture and, crucially, denounces those who fail to match such ableist
images and signs as really uncivilised, dis-abled, fragmented, dis-coordinated shells of
humanity.”
Because we are all so lacking, our attention is drawn away from the able (which we are
conscious of lacking) and onto the disabled (who reminds us of the fragmentation within
ourselves, which we mourn.) Disabled people are disavowed: stared at/through, loved/hated,
feared/examined, in order to shift attention away from the myth of our own ableness.
The “big lie” of a society prejudiced towards the able is that there is where lack lies (in the
disabled person) not here in myself.
(Hunt, 1966:151 - 156), “there are traces of a desire [my italics] to externalise evil, to
find a scapegoat, in attitudes to the sick … We are perhaps saying that society is sick if
we can’t face our sickness [Hunt’s italics], if it does not overcome its natural fear and
dislike of unpleasantness as manifested by disability.”
Idealization: We feel uncomfortable with the vulnerability we see in disabled people. The
part of us which wants to strive for mastery and independence might hate them. We
compensated for this anxiety-creating hate by idealizing disabled people.
Reaction formation: Similar to idealization, we run to the opposite emotion of that which
is causing anxiety. If we feel resentment or anger towards an “other group,” we may
overly identify with them.
Applications
Advice from Hunt to the disabled person who is mentally able enough to “escape” from
“disabledness”
“But if we deny our special relation to the dark in this way, we shall have ceased to
recognise our most important asset as disabled people in society – the uncomfortable,
subversive position from which we act as a living reproach to any scale of values that
puts attributes or possessions beyond the person (Hunt, 1966: 158-159).”
Hunt encourages us to question the ideal subject of society: The phallus (Really?) AKA
masterfulness, ability, wholeness, and urges disabled people to consider their exclusion from this
rat race (measuring contest?) not as a lack but as a place of resistance.
To demonstrate specifically how our reactions to disabled people highlight how our culture is
capable of promoting human suffering. For example, the culture may promote the pursuit of
impossible ideals and be narcissistic in character, focusing on gratification, which benefs some
members of society at the cost of others.
Flynn, Andrew G., (2012). Fact or Faith?: On the Evidence for Psychotherapy for Adults With
Intellectual Disability and Mental Health Needs. Current Opinion in Psychiatry, 25(5)
342-347. Retrieved from http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/770314
Goodley, Dan, (2010) Disability Studies and Psychoanalysis: Time for the couch or culture?
Paper presented at The Space Between: Disability in and out of the counselling room
Conference, University of Toronto, Canada.
Watermeyer, Brian. Disability and psychoanalysis, Disability and Social Change: A South
African Agenda. Accessed from http://www.hsrcpress.ac.za/. Accessed on May 7, 2015.