Psychoanalytic Voice » Community Mental Health https://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za Mon, 10 Oct 2016 07:35:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.15 Psychoanalysis moves forward https://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/psychoanalysis-moves-forward/ https://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/psychoanalysis-moves-forward/#comments Mon, 10 Oct 2016 07:35:09 +0000 http://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/?p=159

SAPC Conference 2016

Molweni,

 

We are pleased to say that we have had a very good response to our SAPC National Conference. Bookings are going fast and furious and many people have commented enthusiastically about the rich and diverse conference programme. Thank you all for your support and encouragement.

For those who have not yet booked and who are concerned about costs, here are a number of options that might make the decision easier:

  1. Group rates: For 5 or more registrations we are offering a reduced registration of – R1,800 per person/ R650 per student
  2. For out of town people we have retained the early-bird fee to compensate for the extra costs incurred
  3.  CPD points (both normal CEU’s and ethics points) have been applied for.
  4. The AGM on the Sunday is intended as a cost-saving strategy, saving on travel costs. If you need to represent your group at the AGM you may be able to negotiate a travel subsidy from your group?
  5. We would like to remind you that skyping is another way in which you can participate in the AGM if your situation does not allow you to attend in person. Please alert us if you will be skyping in to the AGM meeting so that we can make the necessary technical provisions.

We encourage you all to attend the Cocktail Party on the Friday 28th October.

  • We are in the process of securing an address by an Official of the Western Cape Health Department
  • Bea Wirz  bwirzct@gmail.com and Siobhan Sweeney Siobhan@humannature.co.za are busy organising a SAPC Poster Display of our members’ diverse psychoanalytic work.
  • Nicky Jordan nicolettecjordan@gmail.com is setting up a book display of our memberships publications.
  • Enzo Sinisi enzo@hixnet.co.za  is setting up an innovative COG initiative facilitating the ongoing dialogue between members before, during and after the conference.
  • Dain Peters and Candice Dumas have been developing and fundraising for the piloting of new SAPC Video Award Project. In support of this, there will be a screening of 4 short videos created by the UCT students.

Many thanks to all of these members for all of their hard work!  As you can see the cocktail party promises to be a lively event. It is scheduled to end at 19h15 so that still gives you time to proceed with your normal Friday evening plans or, even better, of devising other ways to continue the evening together with out of town colleagues. Such networking is particularly central to this SAPC initiative.

Make sure you don’t miss out by booking soon to attend the cocktail party and by supporting these efforts by contributing your posters, publications and signing up for the COG initiative.

We are looking forwarding to see you all at the Conference.

Best wishes

SAPC Conference Committee

 

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Invisible Discourses in South Africa’s Patriarchy https://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/invisible-discourses-in-south-africas-patriarchy/ https://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/invisible-discourses-in-south-africas-patriarchy/#comments Fri, 09 Sep 2016 08:57:33 +0000 http://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/?p=155

I recently encountered a situation that fully revealed my male privilege in the midst of a South African society dominated by patriarchal structure. The whole incident left me feeling disconsolate, puzzled, and embarassed. 

 

I had entered into the men’s toilet area of a shopping centre in my area. The time of day was late morning, and the lavatory was occupied by only two people; a male using the urinal, and a cleaner wiping the mirror and walls. This is what one might expect to find in any number of shopping centre toilet areas, yet this scene was unique in one key construction- the cleaner was a woman.

 

I was momentarily halted by this occurrence as a swathe of  thoughts and emotions circulated in my being. What’s going on? Did the guy see that the cleaner is female? Should I ask her to leave? How does she feel about being here? I need to use the facilities, should I just use them as per normal even in her presence? These blitzed through my mind in a concoction of entanglement until I decided to follow my base instinctual drives and relieve myself, partially in her view but completely in her presence. After washing my hands and exiting the scene stayed rooted firmly in my conscious mind with added reflection and emotion. 

 

What happened was clearly an emboldened violation of Women’s Rights. Currently in South Africa National Women’s Month (August) where Women’s Day (9th of August) is commemorated as an historic 40 year young event where women of all races marched to the Union Buildings to petition against our country’s pass document laws. Liberation from legislative discrimination is still slowly spreading into the realms of society where day-to-day interpersonal changes are most needed. Our treatment of women is still incredibly violent, and silencing.

 

 Furthermore, the eerie ‘naturalness’ of the scene fortified a hegemonic structure that is quintessentially violent in it’s treatment of the female body. She quickly turned her head away when men entered the toilet, as we all remained silent to this interaction. It reminded me of how we silence mostly through our actions stronger than our words, and the act is so visceral that it can be felt in your body long after the initial event.  The observations I made of my violent behaviour clearly displayed that at a change-effecting level, we (as men) are perhaps the most destructive beings that have inhabited the planet Earth. Aside from all the perversions of nature that we have enacted in the forms of weapons, chemicals, processed foods, and machinery, our brazen responses to obviously immoral situations is in need of further transformation. 

 

I then delved into the sheer indignity of what was going on. The man who was there before I exited left without washing his hands while she cleaned urine residue from the surfaces. It seemed to mirror some aspects of the domestic situation where the Woman dutifully abides by cleaning up after her male partner, children, fathers, and brothers. We unacknowledge this by literally ‘pissing on’ her accomplishments, and going with the misguided expectation that we will always be cleaned after. This point is probably the most poignant considering where South Africa is currently located in contextual terms. Our President, accused of rape in 2006  admitted to having unprotected sex with Fezekile Kuzwayo (now known as Khwezi) who he knew to be HIV Positive but claimed that taking a shower immediately after sex reduced his risk of contracting the virus. The controversies surrounding the president’s phallus have been a source for wider debates, yet even with abstract interpretations one can deduce that the body of the female is the ultimate container for a man’s discharge; whether she consents or not. Supporters of Khwezi stood in Silent Protest as Zuma delivered his briefing at the closing of the IEC Conference on August 6th, glaringly unaware of what was happening in front of him (http://ewn.co.za/2016/08/06/Anti-rape-protesters-disrupt-Zumas-speech)

 

Inline images 1

 

Picture: Thomas Holder EWN.

 

After being forceably ejected from the room, there was considerable backlash AGAINST the Silent Protesters from the African National Congress’s Women League. This would be surprising from all organisations, yet the Cadre’s of the Old Guard have declared themselves as ‘Zuma’s Women’, and have proudly declared to defend our President ‘with their buttocks’  http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2014/09/15/we-will-defend-with-our-buttocks-mokonyane . Yet again we see that the female body is an objectified mean’s to patriarchy’s end, even in perversion of sexual intercourse, by the protection of the phallus in public spaces. Essentially, it is strikingly similar to the silencing of the female voice with the male phallus as done so violently in the toilet area I stepped into. 

 

Bertrand Leopeng is a Counselling Psychologist, Training Psychoanalyst Provisional Candidate, and multipotentialite in Tshwane South Africa. He helped organise the Silent Protest 2015 at Wits University, and is interested in many diverse topics such as feminism, race, neuroplasticity, and mindfulness. https://bertrandleopengpsychology4all.wordpress.com/

 

tags- gender, violence, rape, South Africa, 

 

 

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Call For Abstracts SAPC 2016 Conference. https://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/call-for-abstracts-sapc-2016-conference/ https://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/call-for-abstracts-sapc-2016-conference/#comments Wed, 03 Aug 2016 08:00:33 +0000 http://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/?p=149 Molweni,

 

We are writing to remind you of the SAPC conference and to invite you and your group/s to think about how you will be participating.

 

We are very pleased to announce an early line-up of Participants that includes: Armien Abrahams, Astrid Berg, Amanda Kottler, Trevor Lubbe, Tshidi Maseko, Nomfundo Mogapi, Cora Smith and Sally Swartz.

 

The Early Bird Fee offers expires on 31 August 2016.  The full conference which runs from 12h30 – 17h15 on Friday 28 October and 08h30 – 17h15 on Saturday 29 August costs R1 800 – online registrations at www.sapc.org.za.

 

The national conference of a confederation like SAPC offers a unique opportunity for dialogue between the diverse psychoanalytic traditions and practices represented across groups.   We are delighted to …

 

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SAPC VIDEO AWARDSAPC Conference Poster

… report that we have had a good response to our request for Abstracts.  We are planning longer plenary and shorter parallel sessions with panel discussions as well. There is still time for you to send in that abstract or to encourage a colleague to – the deadline has been extended to 7 August 2016.

 

Our Programme is taking shape – Under the Couch and Country banner, we have decided on two panel discussions:

Friday 28 October 2016 – discussants will engage with the topic What holds us, how it fails and how we fill the gaps.  This panel offers the opportunity for members of groups to present and interrogate the  models and theories that inform our understanding of our South African social contexts,  and possibly contribute to our blind spots.  We hope that the panel and audience will explore the theme by drawing on both personal reflections and clinical experiences.

Saturday 29 October 2016 –  Politics and the Psychoanalytic practitioner. Using the text “Is Politics the last Taboo in Psychoanalysis?” (Psychoanalytic Perspectives, 2004, vol. 2 pp 5-37), discussants will examine how our engagement with politics enters into our theories and our work.

 

The SAPC Video Award (Flyer attached) is an exciting pilot project which, emulating the successful IPA project, elicits short four-minute films dealing with public perception of psychoanalysis in this country. Winning films will be screened at the conference.  .

 

We’d like to use Posters to communicate visually information about the SAPC groups and work being done by our members. Many groups do have posters from the 2014 Colloquium – please let us know if you’d like to display a poster as we need to make display arrangements. Perhaps your group might want to put one together, if not dust your old one off!

 

With such an exciting diversity of panels, projects, presentations and papers we are anticipating a vibrant and stimulating conference.  We look forward to your participation – sign up now!

 

Enkosi,

SAPC Conference Organising Committee

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Resistances in Beginnings, Bertrand Leopeng. https://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/resistances-in-beginnings-bertrand-leopeng/ https://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/resistances-in-beginnings-bertrand-leopeng/#comments Mon, 16 May 2016 07:44:37 +0000 http://psychoanalyticvoice.co.za/?p=145 Blog Post 1.

As I write this post intended for the public and Psychoanalytic Community as a whole, I find myself asking the question- what took so long. The natural answers come to the conscious mind- I have been busy, I haven’t had time to formulate something coherent, ‘life keeps getting in the way’. These are all reasonable to some degree of truth, but they also mask deeper explanations about the difficulties in starting something new. Interestingly enough, the process of even coming up with these reasons is what Freud calls rationalization and it is used as a means for us to logically explain why we do certain behaviours or engage in certain acts.

However, rationalization takes us away from the true meaning of our actions and this meaning lies beneath the surface, in our unconscious minds. The unconscious is always present in our everyday lives and is often a motivating factor for our behaviours. We repeat these same patterns on a daily basis, and sometimes fail to realise why they do more harm than good.

We also fail to release that there can be a feeling of stagnancy or repetitiveness due to our inability (or unwillingness) to understand the meaning behind our behaviours. I have been experiencing this stagnancy in relation to the visibility of Psychoanalytic thinking in public discourse such as the media. The, perhaps controversial, truth is that maybe we have become too accustomed to accepting the current state of events within our community and challenging them rouses uncomfortable feelings in the unconscious. I speak here of:

  • Maintaining the status quo.
  • Apartheid, Racism.
  • Exclusivity of the field.
  • Separation of scope of practice, creating divisions within.
  • The maintaining of ideals which are detrimental for helping us to be aware of reality.

Confronting these issues on a personal basis has also been complex to engage with, as they seem to raise more issues and demand more meaning-making. As a community under constant scrutiny in South Africa, we as Psychoanalytic Practitioners/Thinkers/Activists should attempt to reveal the more indiscernible elements of our society and interpret them in ways that we can all understand. Ultimately, the unconscious plays a significant role in our interactions and ability to comprehend, and we should not be all too shy of engaging with the truths about our profession. Over the next coming posts we will engage with these issues more deeply, and see if we can depart from repetitiveness into responsiveness and awareness


Bertrand Leopeng 

SAPC Media Portfolio Executive Committee

BA (Wits), BA Hons (Wits), MA Counselling Psychology (Wits). 

 

This blog post series will be presented as frequently as possible and will include many contributions from various authors.

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