A psychoanalytic discursive psychology: From consciousness to unconsciousness

M Billig - Discourse Studies, 2006 - journals.sagepub.com
Discourse Studies, 2006journals.sagepub.com
This article presents the position for a Psychoanalytic Discursive Psychology. This position
combines two elements: an action-theory of language, derived from Wittgenstein's later
philosophy, and a revised Freudian concept of repression. According to Wittgenstein and
most contemporary discursive psychologists, language is to be understood as action, rather
than being assumed to be an outward expression of inner, unobservable cognitive
processes. However, a critical approach demands more than an interactional analysis of …
This article presents the position for a Psychoanalytic Discursive Psychology. This position combines two elements: an action-theory of language, derived from Wittgenstein’s later philosophy, and a revised Freudian concept of repression. According to Wittgenstein and most contemporary discursive psychologists, language is to be understood as action, rather than being assumed to be an outward expression of inner, unobservable cognitive processes. However, a critical approach demands more than an interactional analysis of language acts: it requires an analysis of ideology. Because what is left unsaid can be as ideologically important as what is said, there is a need to investigate socially reproduced unconsciousness. This means taking the notion of repression seriously. Whereas Freud imagined repression to be an inner psychic process, it can, by contrast, be seen as an activity that is constituted within everyday language. In this respect, language is fundamentally both expressive and repressive. The social and psychological significance of a Psychoanalytic Discursive Psychology are discussed.
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