Published in The Encyclopedia of
Critical Psychology, T. Teo (Ed.), Springer,
2013.
The Psychology of Oppression
Carl Ratner
http://www.sonic.net/~cr2
Introduction
Psychology
of oppression is both a phenomenon and an explanatory construct -- just as psychology
is a phenomenon and also the study of that phenomenon (e.g., behavioristic
psychology, cognitive psychology). The phenomenon called "psychology
of oppression" is the psychological effects of social oppression, and the
psychological requirements that sustain (are functional for) social oppression.
In other words, social oppression includes a psychological complement in the victim
that contributes to his subjugation. (Psychology of oppression also includes the
psychology of oppressors, that we shall not explore here; but see Tabensky, 2010).
The construct Òpsychology of
oppressionÓ is a way of understanding psychological debilities as products of
social oppression. It is a social-psychological construct that integrates
psychology and society as two sides of the same coin. It identifies society as
oppressive in certain ways, and peoplesÕ psychology as implicated in that
oppression (both as an effect of oppression and also a contribution to --
reinforcement of -- oppression). It says that psychological debilities are an
index (measure) of social oppression.
The
phenomenon "psychology of oppression" consists of psychological
stultification across a wide range of psychological processes. Social
oppression enlists, coopts, corrupts many psychological processes in its
victims to do its bidding.
Oppressed
psychology falls short of realizing the person's individual potential/aptitudes,
it also falls short of realizing her potential for what she could and should be
as a social being. Psychology of oppression stunts people's capacity to
understand, own, and control their society, which are all necessary to
understand and fulfill oneself. Indeed, this is the primary function of
psychology of oppression. Stunting the panoply of psychological processes such
as cognition, perception, emotions, motivation, sensibility, imagination,
aesthetics, morals, and self-concept, serves social oppression by oppressing
social being. Social oppression is the basis, function, and character of
psychological stultification. Personal stultification is part of this social
process, not its origin. Personal and psychological stultification are social
problems that can only be eradicated through democratizing and cooperativizing the society. Stultification cannot be
overcome through personal means at the personal level which
do not directly transform social oppression.
Psychology
of oppression is not limited to morbid psychopathology such as schizophrenia
and depression. Oppression may debase normal psychological phenomena. Poor
environments may curtail educational achievement.
Psychology
of oppression is not limited to psychology that is disfavored (e.g, low educational achievement, prejudice,
superficiality, apathy). It may also include socially-valued psychological
phenomena such as craving, impulsively buying, and identifying with consumer
products; Islamic women accepting gender apartheid; electing political
candidates and endorsing political policies that represent the interests of the
elite class rather than the populace; conforming to restrictive, punitive theological
dogma; enjoying vile, vapid entertainment programs; crude, superficial,
sensationalistic aesthetic taste; believing superficial and biased news;
feeling insecure, harried, docile at work; plus irrationality, conformity, selfishness,
and short-sightedness (quick return on investment). All of these are debased/stunted
psychological forms that fall short of fulfillment, and are ultimately based
in, serve, and embody social oppression and diminished social being (i.e.,
understanding, owning, and controlling macro cultural factors).
Psychology
of oppression is objective, an "Objektiver Geist"
Designating
the foregoing phenomena as the psychology of oppression is not an arbitrary
designation based on the evaluator's personal prejudices. Psychology of
oppression can be objectively demonstrated to diminish the subject's psychology
and sociality, and to subjugate him to the economic and political interests of
a ruling social elite.
Employees
who are insecure, docile, and obsequious (and valued by employers for this), clearly
operate at diminished capacity and will accept employers' dictates regarding
working conditions.
A public
that is stupefied by news coverage of political events which focuses
upon superficial, personal, sensationalistic, immediate events, is easily misled
into voting for policies and officials which benefit the ruling class to the
detriment of the populace. Capitalist politicians can disguise their true goals
of promoting predatory capitalism under superficial images of being black,
female, growing up poor, being personable, etc. that convince voters to elect
them.
Similarly,
engineering a consumerist psychology that is impulsive, irrational, conformist,
superficial, sensationalistic, uncritical, lazy, and disinterested in
understanding vital product features, allows marketers to induce people to
purchase unnecessary, injurious, and expensive products on the basis of glitzy
appearance, and association with prominent paid spokespeople, which critical,
discerning, rational analysis would repudiate.
Artistic taste/sensibility/perception may have this
same oppressive social character with similar social consequences. Musical
taste may be informed by the same crude, extreme, sensationalistic quality that
advertising has, and it may similarly deprive people of the discerning,
profound sensibility and transcendent vision of beauty and harmony that are
necessary to comprehend, critique, and humanize society and psychology. The
Frankfurt School explored this issue (Horkheimer
& Adorno, 1972; Adorno,
1978). Marcuse (1969, p. 23-48) said that sensibility is a political factor.
Beauty is an important sensibility for practicing freedom ("The beautiful
would be an essential quality of freedom."). Crude, vapid, superficial
sensitivity accepts the unfreedom of the crude, vapid
status quo. A new sensibility that is an aesthetic ethos "would foster, on
a social scale, the vital need for the abolition of injustice and misery and
would shape the further evolution of the standard of living."
The oppressive
causes, characteristics, and function of psychology of oppression are also objectively
demonstrable in the case of fundamentalist religion: Engineering a mystified
consciousness that feels confused, weak, ignorant, and afraid of alien,
unfathomable, miraculous, punitive, spiritual forces, leads people to
uncritically submit to spiritual leaders. Devotees are taught to abandon
analysis, logic, empirical reality, and critique, and to adopt an
extra-ordinary, form of consciousness -- blind faith in religious authority --
to know what is going on.
All these
examples of psychology of oppression are valued by the oppressive groups that
impose them because they sustain their wealth and power.
The form
and content of psychology of oppression
Both the
content and the form of psychological phenomena may become oppressed and
oppressing/oppressive.
The
content of desire may include wanting junk food or wanting some watch that a
movie star wears. This content is oppressive because it is unhealthy and
conformist. Additionally, the form of desire may become oppressive, as when we
develop an insatiable craving for shoes or handbags. Here, the form of
desire as an insatiable craving is oppressive because it dominates us.
The same
is true for thinking: the content of what we think about may become oppressive,
as when we believe that pro-capitalist politicians and policies are good for us
when they are not; or when people deny global warming and suffer from its
devastation. The form of our thinking may also become oppressive, as when we
base our ideas upon spurious, superficial associations without firm evidence.
This is the case when we associate a consumer product with an attractive or
prestigious model, or when we believe a political candidate will work for our
interest because s/he served in the army, or appears sincere, or had immigrant
parents, or is black or a woman.
The form
of psychological phenomena may be more important and more difficult to
understand and re-educate than the content is. We may be able to understand
that the content of junk food and movie starsÕ watches are not good to pursue,
however, if the form of our thinking remains irrational, impulsive, and
sensationalistic, we will find it difficult to studiously inform ourselves
about consumer products and we will find it difficult to control our impulses
for their attractive glitter.
The
importance of psychology of oppression
The
construct Òpsychology of oppressionÓ
á makes oppression an explicit topic of psychological
research and theory. Relates psychological processes and phenomena to societal
oppression. Oppression is a societal term that includes oppressor and
oppressed. Relating these political constructs to psychological issues frames
the latter in cultural-political terms. Oppression is far different from
personalized terms such as mistreatment or abuse. Research will seek to
identify oppressive social factors -- such as poverty, stupefying
entertainment, superficial news media, mystification in the form of
advertising, religion, and political and corporate lies -- and oppressive
psychological effects of these social factors. Psychology of oppression cannot
be studied by conventional acultural theories and
methodologies. The concept of psychology of oppression calls for radically new
cultural-psychological theories and methodologies. A case in point is the act
and psychology of State-sanctioned violence. When a government makes a
geopolitical decision to conquer a country such as Vietnam or Iraq, and it
sends soldiers to kill local citizens, this act and psychology of violence is
entirely a cultural-political phenomenon. It is a cognitive decision based upon
strategic interests of the leaders; it's motive is to conquer and control and
extract advantages; it is planned and prepared for over time; weapons are
stockpiled; and troops are recruited, trained, and indoctrinated about the
importance of the mission. This offensive aggression to exploit a population
has nothing to do with animalistic mechanisms or reasons such as an instinct to
kill for food, or an instinctive defense against an immediate physical threat
to the individual animal. Reducing political-cultural violence to animal
instincts/mechanisms (and employing methodologies designed to study the latter)
falsifies its cultural-political basis, character, and function.
á explains numerous debilitating psychological
phenomena in a parsimonious way through a common explanatory construct. They
are neither accidental, mysterious, surprising, personal, nor
natural. They are the result of social oppression. They are necessary
for social oppression to maintain itself. They must exist. They can never be
eliminated as long as social oppression exists. They are political phenomena, they make politics central to Psychological
theory and research. Psychology of oppression frames the different competencies
of lower class and upper class individuals in terms of class differences in
power and opportunities. Lower class competencies in communication, language,
literacy, and logical reasoning are deficiencies caused by oppression
and functional for maintaining the oppression of lower class individuals. Lower
class competencies are just as impoverished as their wages, houses, and
neighborhoods are. Lower class competencies are not merely stylistic differences
from upper class competencies. Psychology of oppression sensitizes us to the
organic wholeness of material and psychological oppression
á enhances psychological science by identifying true
explanatory constructs and descriptors of psychological phenomena, and
debunking false explanatory constructs and descriptors
á regards psychological debilitation as victimization of societal
abuse. Victims of psychology of oppression are not blamed for their
debilitations, however, their oppressed psychology/behavior is criticized for
being debilitated and debilitating (Boltanski. 2011)
á exposes and challenges oppressive elements of society
á develops interventions that repudiate and
circumvent oppressive psychological phenomena. This is critical for removing debilitating
perceptions, emotions, desires, needs, self-concept, motivation, and reasoning
processes that prevent people from understanding social problems and from
pursuing concrete, viable actions that will eradicate them. Alleviating the
psychology of oppression is prerequisite to developing viable emancipatory
actions on the personal, group, and international levels.
á illuminates theoretical issues regarding the relation
between psychology and culture. Psychology of oppression exemplifies and
validates cultural psychology -- particularly "macro cultural
psychology." Psychology of oppression utilizes -- exploits -- general
principles of macro cultural psychology, particularly political origins,
characteristics, and functions of psychological phenomena; the socialization of
psychology; the active internalization of this socialization in individual
cognitions, perceptions, emotions, and self-concept; and the active
externalization (performance, reproduction) of socialized
cultural-psychological phenomena in behavior. Of course, psychology of
oppression includes distinct concrete features such as mystification that are
not present in emancipatory psychology.
á ties psychological improvement to social improvement, and
vice versa
The
psychology of oppression is therefore a scientific psychological construct, a
political construct, a socially critical construct, and an emancipatory
construct, all in one.
Definition
Psychology
of oppression refers, first and foremost, to the fact that oppressed psychology
is the subjective processes that sustain oppression within the victims of
oppression. Oppressed psychology is oppressive, oppressing psychology. It is
not the passive result of oppression, but an active reproducing of oppression
by consciousness/subjectivity/agency (Ratner, 2011). Victims of oppression are
unwittingly complicit in their own oppression. Psychology of oppression
consists of motivation, agency, perception, emotions, ambitions, ideals,
reasoning, memory, aesthetics, and morals that accept the oppressive social system,
desire it, identify with it, take it for granted as normal and even as ideal,
take pleasure in it, defend it, and reject alternatives to it. This is only
possible because consciousness/psychology has been mystified and manipulated to
not perceive, understand, or resist the oppressive society and the oppressive
social basis, characteristics, and function of psychological phenomena.
Psychology
of oppression reveals that oppression is not always perceptible and repellant.
It can be disguised and beguiling. People do not always know they are
oppressed. Sometimes they have to be educated about their oppression. The
reason is that oppression stunts peopleÕs critical, rational, analytical,
probing capabilities. Normative oppression also becomes taken-for-granted and
mundane, and therefore imperceptible.
Psychology
of oppression is promulgated by oppressing/oppressive social groups
Oppressors
promote psychology of oppression through the institutions, artifacts, and
conceptual apparatuses they control -- think tanks, advertising, news outlets,
entertainment institutions, university research institutes, religious
institutions, political parties, and governmental agencies (Ratner, 2012a, pp.
310-322).
Foucault
(1978/2012, p. 110) describes the vastness of this process in one example:
I study things
like a psychiatric asylum, the forms of constraint, exclusion, elimination, disqualification,
let us say, the reason that is always precisely embodied, embodied in the form
of a doctor, a medical knowledge, a medical institution, etc., exercised on
madness, illness, un- reason, etc., what I study is an architecture, a spatial
disposition; what I study are the disciplinary techniques, the modalities of
training, the forms of surveillance, still in much too broad terms, but... what
are the practices that one puts in play in order to govern men, that is, to
obtain from them a certain way of conducting themselves?... it was out of this
machinery of exclusion, of surveillance, of training, of therapy, etc., that
there came to be constituted the hospital—first confinement, then the
hospital, then psychiatry. That is the relation of power as principle of
intelligibility, of the relationship between materiality and rationality."
" From this analytical grid we can at once reconstruct the way possible
objects of knowledge are constituted, and on the other hand how the subject
constitutes itself, that is to say, what I call subjectification
[lÕassujettissement], a word I know is difficult to
translate to English, because it rests on a play on words, subjectification
[assujettissement] in the sense of the constitution
of the subject, and at the same time the way in which we impose on a subject
relations of domination.
The main
purpose of psychology of oppression is to adjust to
social and material oppression, and to curtail and distort people's
understanding of social reality so they will not see its oppressive character.
Everything that distracts from a rational, objective comprehension of social
reality obfuscates oppression and allows it to flourish undetected. Oppression is sustained by a wide network of distracting,
obfuscating tactics. These include official lies, stupefying
entertainment, banal art, superficial news, irrational philosophies, and
organized religion.
For example, when religious authorities
convince people to believe in fictitious, unfathomable religious entities,
ideas, and rituals, this forces devotees to rely on "wise"
authorities to lead them. A non-existent god cannot be known by ordinary powers
of perception and reason because it does not exist. Consequently, devotees who
believe in an institutionalized god are forced to depend upon religious
authority to interpret "his" will. Devotees can never question
authoritative interpretation of a god which they
cannot perceive or fathom. The more imaginary (mysterious, miraculous) the
religious construct is, the more it prevents normal human powers from
understanding and challenging it, and the more it forces devotees to rely upon
religious authorities. Religious historical myths -- such as god opening the
Red Sea to allow the Jews to walk out of Egypt -- are so miraculous that it makes
devotees admire, depend on, and obey their religious leaders -- who are
spokesmen of this awesome god -- as wise people who can recount and adulate
this miraculous, unfathomable event. In contrast, a realistic account of how
the Jews left Egypt would allow devotees to engage in empirical historical
research and logical reasoning that would enhance their understanding of social
forces. It would obviate the unquestioned power of religious authorities to
dispense information. Religious deism and mysticism, like all irrational
thinking, has oppressive political functions. This is an important dimension of
the psychology of religion.
Althusser (1969/2001) explained how ideology is promulgated
by state apparatuses in order to obscure the exploitive character of society
and secure submission to its practices and its leaders. A major ideology in
capitalist society that denies exploitation and secures unwitting submission to
it is individualism. Individualism is a social philosophy which claims that
individuals are responsible for creating their own lives and that society is
nothing more than a set of individually constructed lives. This conception
eliminates any possibility of exploitation by a ruling class because only
autonomous individuals exist. Since exploitation has been ideologically obfuscated,
there is no need for social-psychological critique or reform.
However, this ideology is false. Individuals are
cultural members and their psychology/behavior is culturally structured. Individualism
does not eliminate cultural structures and structuring, it merely blinds people
to the cultural structuring of psychology/behavior that is misconstrued as
personal, authentic, individual agency, self-expression, personal
responsibility, and free choice. Cultural structuring of behavior goes on out
of sight of (behind the back of) the individualist: ÒThe individual is interpellated
[constituted] as a (free) subject in order that he shall (freely) accept
his subjection, i.e. in order that he shall make the gestures and actions of
his subjection Ôall by himselfÕÓ (Althusser,
2001, p. 123).
Volosinov similarly explained how ideology is internalized by
the individual and embraced as his own: Òideological themes make their way into
the individual consciousness (which as we know, is ideological through and
through) and there take on the semblance of individual accents, since
the individual consciousness assimilates them as its ownÓ (Volosinov, 1973, p. 22, my emphasis).
Thus, far from liberating people from cultural
structures and structuring, individualism entraps them within these structures.
It does so by blinding people to these and obfuscating any need for
social-psychological critique and reform.
Althusser
additionally emphasizes that ÒAn ideology always exists in an apparatus
and its practice, or practicesÓ (Althusser, 2001, p. 112). He identifies Ideological
State Apparatuses (ISAs) that promulgate ideology and psychology of oppression.
These include
á
the religious ISA (the system of different churches)
á
the educational ISA (the system of the different public
and private ÔschoolsÕ)
á
the family ISA
á
the legal ISA
á
the political ISA (the political system, including the
different parties)
á
the trade-union ISA
á
the communications ISA (press, radio and television,
etc.)
á
the cultural ISA (literature, the arts, sports, etc.)
Ideological State Apparatuses
compliment other repressive apparatuses such as the police, military, courts, prisons,
and surveillance in securing submission to the social order.
Popular forms of psychology of oppression
The framing of psychology of oppression by social
leaders sets the tone/template for people to construct their own oppressive behavior/psychology.
For example, capitalists invent advertising to promote their products. They
make advertising a cacophony of mindless, vapid, misleading, enticing, sensationalistic
images. We have explained how this social artifact generates oppressive
desires, perceptions, emotions, and self-concept that animate impulsive,
insatiable, uncontrollable, conformist consumer behavior. This then serves as a
model for popular activities such as popular music. Musicians develop punk rock
that has a similar form to mindless, vapid, sensationalistic, extreme,
cacophonous, mind-numbing advertising. This popular music recapitulates and reinforces
the psychology of oppression by depriving people of the discerning sensibility,
the deep, systematic, critical reasoning, and a transcendent vision of beauty
and harmony that are necessary to humanize society and psychology.
Oppressive ruling classes eagerly support and appropriate
popular forms of psychology of oppression. Capitalists hire, sponsor, fund,
advise, market, and represent popular musicians, artists, computer programmers,
movie-makers, athletes, and folk heroes so that they can continue their
oppressive practices (Adorno & Horkheimer, 1972). Football owners embrace extreme,
sensationalistic, popular entertainment venues at the Super Bowl that they own.
Political and economic elites often turn to obscurantist, autocratic religions
to gain support for their oppressive policies (see the chapter on False
Consciousness, this Encyclopedia; available at sonic.net/~cr2).
Psychology
of oppression underlies normal psychology and abnormal psychology
Viewing
normal society as oppressive leads to recognizing that it debilitates
psychological functioning far more extensively than is ordinarily recognized.
Debilitation extends to broad areas of normal psychology; it is not narrowly
confined to instances of abnormal psychology.
Oppressive
normal society incapacitates its citizens in order to adjust them to
oppression. Oppressive society needs people to be functionally pathological, or
functionally incapacitated -- pathological and incapacitated to function in
oppressive conditions. Oppressive society must walk a fine line between
generating functional pathology and incapacitation yet not oppressing people to
the point where their pathology and incapacitation are dysfunctional and render
them incapable of supporting the oppressive system. Dysfunctional pathology and
incapacitation are collateral damage of social oppression.
People are incapacitated as they
participate in the system, not only as they drop out of it. Slaves are
incapacitated as they function in slavery; religious devotees
are psychologically incapacitated by obeying theocratic dogma;
succumbing to capitalist commercial news, advertisements (including political
advertisements), and entertainment is psychologically debilitating/stupefying.
The more that
society becomes oppressive – i.e., hierarchical, impoverished, alienated,
disenfranchising, precarious, mystifying (by ideology and by practices that
assault rationality and sensibility), militaristic, intolerant of dissent, and infiltrated
by police, surveillance, and incarceration (the United States spends 3 times more money for incarceration than for
public education, per pupil) -- the more that normal psychology
becomes the psychology of oppression. This is manifest in the increasing
prevalence of destructive behavior such as workplace rampages and school
shootings. The more prevalent these become, the less credible it is to explain
them in terms of individual processes (Ratner, 2012, pp. 194-198). For example,
before the financial crisis began three years ago, Greece had
the lowest suicide rate in Europe at 2.8 incidents per 100,000 inhabitants.
With the financial crisis, Greece doubled that number of suicides
which catapulted its suicide rate to the highest in Europe in the first
half of 2011. Attempted suicides have also increased (The Guardian, Dec.
18, 2011: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/dec/18/greek-woes-
suicide-rate-highest).
Neither personal nor biological attributes can explain this
demographic change in suicide. They are products and reproducers of social
pathology, not original causes of it.
Psychology
of oppression is normal and functional in oppressive society. This means that
normal psychology contains oppressed, oppressive, oppressing, debilitating
features and functions. This is normal pathology, or pathological normalcy,
or functional psychological incapacitation. Normal psychology debunks the antithesis
of normal psychology from abnormal psychology. That separation places all
serious psychological problems in the abnormal domain, and implies that
normalcy is good/fulfilling. However, pathological normalcy means that normal
psychology is continuous with abnormal psychology, for both are stunted, and
the stultification of both is rooted in exploitive macro cultural factors, embody
their features, and promulgate cultural factors (see Fromm, 2010; Ratner &
El-Badwi, 2011).
Psychology of oppression is fundamentally underestimating the
extent of oppression and the reasons for it. This includes underestimating the
extent of exploitation, privilege, power, and discrimination, and
underestimating how deeply they penetrate the psychology of people. Thus, high
measures of subjective well-being may indicate false
consciousness about one's oppression rather than true well-being.
Minimizing oppression is practiced by oppressors to deflect
criticism of their exploitive practices. Oppressed people unwittingly
recapitulate the ideology of their oppressors and also underestimate the extent
of their own oppression. Lower class Americans typically misperceive themselves
as less poor than they are. In addition, advocates for the populace typically
adulate oppressed people as seeing through oppression and resisting it, when
they actually do not. Underestimating psychology of oppression is fatal to
social reform because it fails to expose and correct the psychological
limitations that undermine it.
Individual,
abnormal psychology is used to obfuscate structural, normal pathology
Normal
pathology, or pathological normalcy, means that the primary form of
psychopathology is normal, functional pathology; for
this is the state of the majority of individuals who participate in normal
oppression. Abnormal, dysfunctional pathology afflicts comparatively few
individuals.
However,
normal pathology is neither exposed nor treated. Instead, the less prevalent
and less pernicious abnormal psychology is given attention and treatment. The
reason is that this insulates normal oppression from exposure and challenge.
When the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual continually expands its list of mental illnesses,
and physicians continually prescribe more medicine to treat them, and
therapists treat more individuals to confront their personal disturbances, all
this creates the impression that serious psychological problems are ab-normal, biological, and individual -- rather than being
structural, social, and normal. Thus, twenty percent of Americans
now take at least one drug to treat one or more psychiatric disorders. Usage
among women, and children under ten, doubled between 2001 and 2010. The Centers
for Disease ControlÕs 2011 Mental Illness Surveillance Report stresses
that 25% of Americans are mentally ill and one in two will develop a mental
illness sometime in their lifetimes.
What
psychiatrists claim to be a rise in abnormal psychology is mostly a rise in
normal pathology that is disguised as a rise in abnormal, biologically-based,
individual psychopathology. (Of course, increased normal pathology also
generates higher rates of serious, abnormal psychology – because serious
psychopathology is as social as normal pathology.)
Psychiatry
uses abnormal psychology as a smokescreen to obfuscate societyÕs dangerous
psychological problems. Psychiatry de-socializes and de-politicizes
psychological problems by dumping them into non-social categories such as
abnormal psychology that are proclaimed to have biological, individual bases,
characteristics, principles, functions, and treatment.
Shyness cannot be allowed to be left in normal, social terms that
reflect social pressures such as intimidating competition. So shyness must be
converted into Òsocial phobia,Ó dubbed abnormal, and medicalized
in order to quarantine it from normal pathology. Similarly, being distractible
cannot be left as a neutral phenomenon because that would leave open the
possibility that it has social origins in the frenetic proliferation of
consumer goods and advertisements, and the frenetic distraction by multiple,
intense pressures of capitalist social life. So ordinary distractibility must
be pathologized into an abnormal psychology called
hyperactivity/attention deficit disorder that is construed as biologically-based and medically treated. This quarantining
of the problem prevents it from being linked to its normal social sources.
This
ideology becomes a macro cultural factor that misleads people to misunderstand
their psychological problems as their own. Psychiatry thus mystifies
psychological problems and exacerbates the psychology of oppression.
The news
media compounds this mystification. Every report of a psychological disturbance
is framed in individual terms of pathology and treatment. Even when battalions
of American soldiers commit crimes or suicides, solutions are only proposed in
terms of individual counseling. These problems are never traced to any social
issues that should be transformed at the societal level. Individualized
psychotherapy is thus another smokescreen that obfuscates society's problems
(Cushman, 1994).
Most lay
people and professionals worry about abnormal psychology threatening normal
people and social structure. However, the true problem is the reverse –
it is the intensification of normal pathology that threatens most people and
society. Intensifying normal social-psychological pathology is also what causes
abnormal psychology. The latter is an index of the former.
For instance,
deaths from illegal drugs cocaine and heroin are approximately 5,000/year
combined, compared with drug deaths from legal, prescription painkillers
that amount to over 15,000/year (which does not include deaths from other
legally taken drugs).
Reducing
psychopathy requires addressing and eradicating normal, general, pervasive,
structural oppression more than addressing unusual, circumscribed, individual,
abnormal stressors and breakdowns. Reducing abnormal psychology will not
mitigate normal, general oppression and normal pathology, however eradicating
normal, general social oppression will mitigate extreme, circumscribed,
abnormal psychology.
Tracing pathology
to normal conditions begins with framing it in normal terminology rather than
abnormal terminology. Violent acts such as school killings should be attributed
to normative descriptors and explanatory constructs such as depersonalization,
alienation, objectification, egocentrism (imposing one's will on others in
order to satisfy one's own desires), desensitization to other's feelings and
needs, aggressive, instrumentalism (using others as an instrument for one's own
desire), misplacing blame for one's problems on individuals rather than social
systems, solving problems through violence, idolizing militarism (donning
military garb and weapons), demolition rather than constructivism. Such normal
terminology makes anti-social behavior comparable to the same attributes and
psychodynamics of normal acts such as police tactics (breaking down someone's
door, tasering them, and taking them away to
detention without any explanation to the suspect or his family members; or violently
dispersing peaceful demonstrators with pepper spray or water cannons),
militarism and imperialism that characterize the U.S. invasion of Iraq and
Vietnam, and corporate managers summarily disposing of -- decimating --
employees (and entire communities) in order to benefit themselves. The linguistic
unification of personal and normative behavior expresses a synthesizing
epistemology that reveals their behavioral/psychological/cultural isomorphism.
The way to minimize personal acts of violence is then seen to require
minimizing normative cultural impetuses of violence in general, of which
personal violence is a part. (This requires attacking the panoply of normal
cultural practices that promote violence. It cannot be limited to attacking
one, superficial, secondary, extreme practice such as buying and selling
assault weapons.) In contrast, describing perpetrators of school killings in pathological
terms such as disoriented, bi-polar, schizophrenic, troubled, on medication,
hot-tempered, and socially isolated, severs their link with normal pathological
activities, and therefore insulates the latter from analysis and change.
Crime
Crime follows
this same pattern. The most prevalent and pernicious misdeeds are legal ones
committed on the social structure by social leaders such as executives and
political leaders who lie, bribe, defraud, restrain trade, degrade working
conditions, fund and train death squads (in El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua,
and Chile) to assassinate government and union leaders, support dictators, and
decimate communities through outsourcing jobs. These misdeeds are generally not
considered crimes, despite their pernicious affects on masses of people. These
normal crimes are as invisible as normal pathology is, and just as pervasive
and pernicious.
When
misdeeds against the social structure are identified as white-collar crimes they
are more pervasive and pernicious than interpersonal crimes. A single act of
political corruption, pollution, or financial fraud harms thousands of people
at once. Interpersonal crimes such as assault, abuse, robbery, or murder claim
fewer victims.
As with
pathology, the prevalence and harmfulness of criminal acts is inversely
proportional to the fear, attention, and punishment they attract: extreme, gory,
interpersonal crime is regarded as more of a threat and is punished more
harshly than structural misbehavior -- legal and illegal. An individual act of
bank robbery receives more jail time than white collar
fraud or pollution. Terrorist attacks generate enduring fear, conformity, and
security. Yet normal, quotidian pollution kills far more citizens by causing respiratory
problems and cancer, yet it generates little publicity, fear, and critique.
This
means that crime control is not designed to protect the populace; if it were,
it would concentrate on "normal," structural misdeeds and crimes.
Current criminal justice acts to insulate prevalent, pernicious, normal crime/oppression
from observation, condemnation, and eradication.
Oppression
is not total
Oppressive
society and psychology of oppression do not imply that every aspect of social
life and normal psychology is oppressed. These constructs only highlight
essential, widespread oppression and its psychological effects in normal
society. Even oppressive society contains elements of rationality, science,
social concern, education, and cooperation. These elements generate positive
psychological functioning.
Keywords:
agency, indigenous psychology, Vygotsky, ideology, cultural relativism,
multiculturalism, unconsciousness, false consciousness, normal pathology,
abnormal psychology
History
Psychology of oppression
and pathological normalcy differ from Freud's term "psychopathology of
everyday life." Freud sought to analyze mistakes such as faulty memory and
slips of the tongue in terms of personal, intrapsychic mechanisms such as
reaction formation. He did not examine oppressive features of normal social
life to explain psychological debilitation. Freud's was a personal analysis of
psychopathology, not a macro cultural analysis. Fromm made the leap from
psychoanalysis to macro cultural psychology.
Psychology of oppression additionally differs from
psychoanalysis in that it does not subscribe to the idea that oppression is
repressed in consciousness. Oppression is unconscious in the sense that has
been ideologically mystified to appear normal, natural, fateful, and fulfilling
(Ratner, 1994).
International Relevance
Psycholoogy
of oppression is relevant to analyzing whether the social system and
psychological phenomena of foreign people is oppressive or fulfilling. For
instance, the chapter on False Consciousness, this Encyclopedia, describes how
fundamentalist Islamic movements in Saudi Arabia and Egypt have imposed
reactionary, oppressive customs on the people that stunt their psychology.
Lazreg (2000)
describes the same dynamic in Algeria. She describes how fundamentalist
Islamists replaced the "civilizing process" advocated by 19th century
colonists with a "recivilizing mission," or
"recolonization." "The Islamist
movement has provided a total ideology using colonial strategies of
acculturation for political purposes, just as the French did throughout the
colonial era." "It recolonizes private and public spaces by
infusing them with new meanings and norms derived from ideational and
behavioral sources that... are in effect alien to the historical and daily
experiences of individual Algerians." "The new discourse on religion
is not religion but politics under a religious garb" (Lazreg,
pp. 149, 152).
In
addition to the process of Islamisation being
oppressive, the content of the Islamic movement is reactionary and
oppressive. It "chose to deny women the rights they had won after the
independence of their country" (p. 159). "The Islamist movement in
Algeria has not brought about a renaissance in Muslim thought and institutions.
It is neither a reformist movement, nor a social movement bent upon
sociopolitical and economic transformation" (p. 162).
This identification of social and
psychological oppression in international contexts is important for generating
proposals by which indigenous people can develop emancipatory, fulfilling macro
cultural factors. Identifying foreign oppression also bears on questions of
indigenous psychology and cultural relativism that will be discussed below.
Practical Relevance
A critical social-psychological perspective is an
external perspective
To say that a society and its psychology are
oppressive is a critical evaluation that rejects societyÕs present form. It
stands outside the current social parameters, denounces them, and calls for
different ones. An indigenous perspective, in contrast, operates within given
social parameters and accepts them (even when critical of flaws). It opposes
external views of an indigenous culture as ignorant, elitist, and imperialist.
However, where the status quo is oppressive,
indigenous perspectives such as indigenous psychology,
legitimize oppression on the societal and psychological levels. Only an
external perspective is freed of these limitations.
An external perspective on oppression is
additionally necessary because oppression is often imperceptible, normative, taken-for-granted,
habitual, pleasurable, desirable, and applauded. An external analysis must be
made of things that oppressed/oppressive consciousness does not know and
what it does know. What it does know must be shown to be incomplete or
distorted.
Criteria
for assessing psychology of oppression
A vital
question regarding external assessment of psychology of oppression is what are
the criteria for making this assessment? Several criteria may be proposed:
1) Which
group(s) of people initiated the psychological activity, and what were their
interests? Was it businessmen, Imams, conservative politicians and think tanks,
slave owners, revolutionary groups, or the populace? What were their interests
in promoting the activity? How did it benefit them?
Much
psychological engineering was promoted by capitalists to get consumers to
purchase more products so that sales and profits would be increased.
This engineering of desires, motives, perceptions, and reasoning was clearly
designed to enrich the businessmen and make consumers susceptible to their
solicitations. This qualifies consumerism as psychology of oppression.
Similarly, as we have
explained in the chapter on False Consciousness, the Islamic veil was recently
introduced into Saudi Arabia and Egypt by autocratic, reactionary Islamic
authorities who supported despotic governments and
opposed democratic, people-oriented economic and political reforms. The intent
of these theocrats was clearly to segregate women and oppress their social
participation. On these grounds, identifying with the veil can be accurately
described as psychology of oppression.
2) What
methods did promulgators of the psychological activity use to gain its
acceptance by the populace? Islamic authorities used brute force, punishment,
indoctrination, false claims about science and human nature, and prohibitions
on questioning to obtain compliance from Saudi and Egyptian women about wearing
the veil and identifying with it.
Marketers used illogical,
spurious associations between products and famous people, glitzy appearances,
and limiting product sales to brief time periods in order to encourage
impulsive buying. They did not present thorough information about productsÕ
ingredients, origins, or effects; they did not encourage rational analysis and
consideration.
The undemocratic, coercive,
irrational methods used to promote these two activities
indicates that they qualify as psychology of oppression.
3) What
are the psychological and social effects of the psychological activity? Does
the activity promote self-control, understanding of the structure and politics
of oneÕs society, social responsibility, awareness of nature, critical
thinking, rationality, consistent scientific thinking, objective self-understanding
of the characteristics of oneÕs behavior and the social reasons for them, or
ability to control oneÕs physical and social environment? Or does the activity
promote the opposite? The latter would constitute psychology of oppression.
Oppressed psychology is not aware of its oppression.
It is unaware of itself. This is why psychology of oppression is problematical
and resists change. It requires an external analysis and re-education. This is
why people hire therapists, instructors, and doctors.
Critical
Debates
The primary debate about psychology of oppression is leveled by
cultural relativists, indigenous psychologists, multiculturalists, and postmodernists (what
Ratner, 2012a has called micro cultural psychology). Their criticism of the
construct centers around three beliefs:
¥ Psychology of oppression is an elitist,
external evaluation of people that is ignorant and arrogant. In fact,
evaluating people as stunted may lead to imperialistically ÒsavingÓ them by
destroying their culture and replacing it with a colonial one.
¥ Psychology of oppression denigrates and
blames individuals who manifest psychology of oppression.
¥ Psychology
of oppression minimizes individual agency and construes people as social robots
These complaints
are straw men (as the chapter on False Consciousness, this Encyclopedia,
explains). We have emphasized that psychology of oppression critiques social exploitation.
It does not demean or blame the victims. The construct psychology oppression
empathizes with victims of oppression and guides them to blame oppressive
cultural factors, not themselves, for their problems. Psychology of
oppression does not imply coercing people to adopt new psychology. It simply
offers analyses. Guiding people toward self-enrichment and self-empowerment is
no more elitist or imperialist than any ordinary education by trained teachers
is, or than good friends cautioning each other about oversights, misinterpretations,
and consequences of their behavior. In fact, failing to elucidate the
psychology of oppression is politically irresponsible because it obscures ways
that people are oppressed and ways they must think and act in order to
eradicate their oppression. Validating people in their current state is
tantamount to validating their oppression, not their emancipation. (Naziis, Taliban, slavery were all indigenous movements that
must be criticized from outside their parameters.)
It is
true that the twin constructs, psychology of oppression and false consciousness,
have been misused. They have been invoked to justify uprooting local culture
and imposing external culture under the guise of saving or enhancing deprived
indigenous people. However, perversions of a phenomenon are not grounds for
abandoning the phenomenon. Imperialist perversions of psychology of oppression
cannot be used as grounds for repudiating the construct. This would be as
absurd as using destructive uses of machinery to justify repudiating all
machinery; or using the capitalist corruption of democracy to repudiate
democracy in general; or using Stalinist and Maoist perversions of socialism to
denounce socialism in general. Such critics have a superficial, one-dimensional
view of a construct as identical to perverted uses. These critics cannot see
beyond given, perverted forms to apprehend beneficial alternative forms that the
construct can take (Ratner, 2012a).
Cultural
relativists and indigenous psychologists not only exaggerate the role of
colonialism in relation to psychology of oppression; they also overlook the role
of colonization in indigenous societies. This is evident in modern
fundamentalist Islamist movements that are described above and in the chapter
on False Consciousness, this Encyclopedia.
Glorifying
indigenous social movements, and rejecting external social critique such as
psychology of oppression, entraps local people in their own colonialism. This
is true for most of the "post-colonial" states in Africa, including
those that issued from the "Arab Spring." Indigenous psychologists
and cultural relativists deprive oppressed people of the means they need to emancipate
themselves, and they proffer as means for emancipation, indigenous practices
that perpetuate oppression.
Agency:
An individualistic psychological theory
Opponents
of the construct "psychology of oppression" invert the causes of
oppression and their solution. They are led to these errors by their fallacious
conception of agency. They claim that people are naturally agentive in
their mundane activities, because agency is a natural force for self-expression
and self-fulfillment of the individual. Agency is presumed to be an
individualistic construct like rational choice theory. It is not a cooperative,
collective concept. Agency guides individuals to get their needs met through
imposing their meanings on things, and through negotiating and resisting
mundane activities. (Broad social transformation is de-emphasized to achieve authenticity
because authenticity is produced by individual agency.) This is why agency is
to be respected and validated, and why it is deemed oppressive/offensive to
accuse agentive individuals of somehow not knowing what they are doing, and
even doing themselves harm.
A valid
analysis of oppression and eradicating it require a different concept of agency.
People's agency is culturally organized; it is oppressed by oppressive macro
cultural factors; and oppressed agency is oppressive, it oppresses people.
Agency is not naturally/necessarily fully agentive/emancipatory/fulfilling in
its current form. It does not stand outside culture as an apolitical,
individual force for fulfillment. Under normalized oppressive conditions,
agency is active, but it is an agent of oppression, not liberation or
resistance -- e.g., consumerism is active agency that craves new advertisements
and products. However, consumerism oppresses the agent that pursues it. This agency
is inauthentic because its desires, emotions, perceptions, and beliefs
are not its own. Thus the activity of agency is not the point; agency is
always active; the point is the content that agency promulgates. Advocates of
agency disregard content and focus upon mere activity as defining liberation --
as long as agency is active, it is praiseworthy, and "active agency"
is encouraged as empowering. Advocates of agency never consider that activity
may have oppressive content and may be a harmful force to the agent who
implements it.
Agency
must by analyzed as to its cultural-political origins,
characteristics, and function. Agency must renounce its oppressive features and
the oppressive indigenous cultural factors that generate these before it can become
fulfilling/emancipatory. Agency is a teleological project -- like peace,
justice, and democracy -- it is not a ready-made, complete emancipatory force
lying within the individual. (If it were, then we would all be emancipated
already and there would be no social or psychological oppression.) Agency must
develop a new cultural character for itself that negates its current oppressive
cultural character. This requires a novel vision of social transformation that
is implemented in political action. Agency will only become a force for
individual emancipation when it becomes a force for social emancipation.
The
construct psychology of oppression does not dismiss agency, per se. It only faults
individualistic notions of agency, and it advocates a cultural-political agency
that comprehends and improves its society.
Future
Directions
The thrust of the construct Òpsychology
of oppressionÓ is to point out to people how their
consciousness has been mystified by oppressive forces. It points out
that the form and content of many psychological processes, which people take
for granted as normal, comfortable, acceptable, natural, pleasurable, personal,
creative, spontaneous, agentive, and fulfilling (emancipatory) may actually
have been engineered by oppressive social leaders to enrich and empower
themselves by subjugating and stultifying the people. Future directions will
investigate the most cherished, pleasurable, taken-for-granted, normative,
rewarded psychological processes to determine whether they are internalized,
subjective forms of oppression that manufacture consent to social oppression
and prevent people from pursuing emancipatory activities. We will investigate
the concrete cultural form of beliefs, reasoning, emotionality, self-concept,
memories, and perceptions and trace them to cultural-political features of society which are demonstrably oppressive or not.
This cultural-hermeneutical analysis challenges indigenous
perspectives that adulate existing culture and psychology without comprehending
their origins, dynamics, features, and functions.
Ascertaining whether indigenous perspectives are
debilitating or emancipatory can benefit from Vygotsky's
approach to this matter. Vygotsky agreed with anthropologists, Levy-Bruhl and Levi-Strauss that pre-modern people engage in
superstitious, mystical thinking at the expense of rational thinking. Vygotsky
says,
man who first came to throwing bones [akin to rolling
dice to decide how to act in a difficult situation] took an important and
decisive step towards the development of cultured behavior. This does not
contradict the fact that such an operation inhibits any serious attempt to use
reflection or experience in real life: Why bother to think and learn, when you
can simply see what you dream, or roll the dice? Such is the fate of all forms
of magical behavior: very soon they become an obstacle to the further
development of thinking, though at one stage of the historical development of
thinking they constituted the embryo of certain trends (Vygotsky, 1997, pp.
46-47).
VygotskyÕs statement is important for emphasizing that a culturally-formed way of thinking, e.g., magical thinking, may
be limited/flawed in its ability to comprehend reality; it may become an
obstacle to cognitive advancement. It is important to evaluate
psychology/behavior/culture in order to identify strengths and weaknesses, in
order to help people improve. From this perspective,
uncritically/indiscriminately validating all cultures/behavior/psychology is
oppressive because it validates weaknesses that oppress people. Universal
validation may appear respectful and humanistic, but it is actually oppressive.
Vygotsky emphasized that primitive people are not
stupid in the sense of lacking capacity to think rationally. Rather superstitiousness is due to cultural-historical limitations
that shape their thinking. In different conditions,
these same people would think rationally. This perspective, known as activity
theory, is at the heart of the construct psychology of oppression.
Understanding
the psychology of oppression deepens our understanding of oppression and what
is necessary to eradicate it. Eradicating psychology of oppression is a crucial
element in the struggle to eradicate social oppression. This is difficult
because it means that "people cannot reject the
system of domination without rejecting [part of] themselves, their own
repressive instinctual needs and values" (Marcuse, 1969, p. 17).
The construct " psychology of oppression"
helps people to do this, to enrich their psychology by critiquing it,
critiquing the social activity and cultural factors that generate it, and
improving these. Psychology of oppression is a critical-emancipatory-scientific
construct.
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