Psychic waste: Freud, Fechner and the principle of constancy
Raitt, Suzanne
Raitt, Suzanne
Abstract
Twentieth-century culture is obsessed with waste. We worry about whether or not to recycle it, how to dispose of it, whether it is safe, and what will happen to it when we have finally got rid of it. Detritus has its own taxonomy: “rubbish,” “garbage,” and “litter,” for example, construct it as an essentially random, cumulative phenomenon, a by-product of our daily domestic lives. To call something “waste,” on the other hand, is to invoke its history. Nuclear waste, bodily waste, and medical waste are all the result of specific processes: they gesture back to the productive economies that generated them. Even in these days of recycling, waste is almost always disposed of or repudiated, sometimes indifferently, sometimes contemptuously, and even, on occasion, violently.
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2002-12-24
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Rowman & Littlefield
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waste, Freud, Fechner
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English
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https://rowman.com/ISBN/9780742576049/Culture-and-Waste-The-Creation-and-Destruction-of-Value
