Confronting Desire: Psychoanalysis and International Development
English
By (author): Ilan Kapoor
By applying psychoanalytic perspectives to key themes, concepts, and practices underlying the development enterprise, Confronting Desire offers a new way of analyzing the problems, challenges, and potentialities of international development. Ilan Kapoor makes a compelling case for examining development's unconscious desires and in the process inaugurates a new field of study: psychoanalytic development studies.
Drawing from the work of Jacques Lacan and Slavoj iek, as well as from psychoanalytic postcolonial and feminist scholarship, Kapoor analyzes how development's unconscious desires speak out, most often in excessive and unpredictable ways that contradict the outwardly rational declarations of its practitioners. He investigates development's many irrationalitiesfrom obsessions about growth and poverty to the perverse seductions of racism and over-consumption. By deploying key psychoanalytic conceptsenjoyment, fantasy, antagonism, fetishism, envy, drive, perversion, and hysteriaConfronting Desire critically analyzes important issues in developmentgrowth, poverty, inequality, participation, consumption, corruption, gender, race, LGBTQ politics, universality, and revolution.
Confronting Desire offers prescriptions for applying psychoanalysis to development theory and practice and demonstrates how psychoanalysis can provide fertile ground for radical politics and the transformation of international development.
See more