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affective politics, debility and hearing voices: towards a feminist politics of ordinary suffering

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Feminist Review

Abstract

This paper is an intervention within feminist and queer debates that have re-posed so-called negative states of being as offering productive possibilities for political practice and social transformation. What is sometimes called the politics of negative affect or analyses of political feeling has sought to de-pathologise shame, melancholy, failure, depression, anxieties and other forms of ‘feeling bad’, to open up new ways of thinking about agency, change and transformation. Ann Cvetkovich’s recent memoir explores depression as a public feeling and argues that ‘feeling bad might, in fact, be the ground for transformation’. As she suggests, the question, ‘how do I feel’ could usefully be reframed as ‘how does capitalism feel’? This performative staging of political forms of psychosocial reflexivity opens up new strategies for survival, new visions of the future, and importantly de-medicalises feeling beyond an individual expression of psychopathology. The grounds for affective politics might be found within new feminist futures that are attentive to the relations between emotion, affect, feelings and politics. This paper will be situated within these debates and the challenge of thinking about the productive possibilities of negative states of being. However, rather than focus on depression, I will turn my attention to experiences such as psychosis and temporal dissociation, based on my long-standing research with the Hearing Voices Network. In the context of discussions of disability and capability I will discuss the value of concepts such as debility, and ‘living in prognosis’, and respond to the call to think through what such states might offer for feminist and queer practice.

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Notes

  1. Interestingly, Fisher (2014, p. 59) defines depression as a ‘(neuro)philosophical (dis)position’ and as a ‘theory about the world, about life’.

  2. LS v Accident Compensation Corporation [2013] NZACC 385 (22 November 2013). Available at http://www.nzlii.org/nz/cases/NZACC/2013/385.html [last accessed 27 March 2015].

  3. Eleanor Longden, The voices in my head, TEDTalk filmed February 2013. Available at http://tedcom.talks/eleanor_longden_the_voices_in_my_head.html [last accessed 27 March 2015].

  4. Hearing Voices Movement Media Watch, Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/HVMMediaWatch?pnref=story [last accessed 27 March 2015].

  5. See Hearing Voices Network: http://hvn.forumatic.com/ [last accessed 27 March 2015].

  6. See Durham University, Hearing the Voice research project, https://www.dur.ac.uk/hearingthevoice/ [last accessed 11 August 2015].

  7. The Everyday Sexism Project: http://everydaysexism.com and #EverydaySexism@EverydaySexism [both last accessed 27 March 2015].

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Blackman, L. affective politics, debility and hearing voices: towards a feminist politics of ordinary suffering. Fem Rev 111, 25–41 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1057/fr.2015.24

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