Original Article
Psychoanalysis, Culture & Society (2009) 14, 41–48. doi:10.1057/pcs.2008.43
God, gays and good-enough enemies
Cynthia Buracka
aDepartment of Women's Studies, 286 University Hall, 230 N. Oval Mall, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210-1311, USA. E-mail: burack.1@osu.edu
Abstract
Psychoanalytic social theorists who work in the relational tradition have analyzed the psychodynamics of enemy systems and identified persistent themes in the operation of these systems. Although enemy systems often involve enmity between ethnic, national or cultural groups, the psychodynamic symptoms of such systems are observable when social groups cast familiar outgroups as enemies. In contemporary American political discourse, Christian conservative leaders execute movement politics by linking gay people to terrorism and characterizing them as enemies of America. Sexual politics does not present a classic case of intergroup conflict of the sort usually investigated by psychoanalytic theorists. However, psychodynamic analyses of the intersections of religion, politics and sexuality hold great promise for explicating the domestic enmities that are situated at the center of American political life.
Keywords:
relational psychoanalysis, enemies, same-sex sexuality, Christian right, terrorism
MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS
These links to content published by Palgrave Macmillan are automatically generated.
RESEARCH
God, gays and good-enough enemiesPsychoanalysis, Culture & Society Original Article
same-sex weddings, Hindu traditions and modern IndiaFeminist Review Article
Gay Marriage as a Religious Right: Reframing the Legal Debate over Gay Marriage in the United States *Polity Article
Negotiating the Politics of Inclusion: Women and Australian Labor Governments 1983 to 1995Feminist Review Article
See all 21 matches for Research


