JUNE Singer’s Boundaries of the Soul: The Practice of Jung’s
Psychology, first published forty years ago, makes for very interesting reading
and one particular section suggests strong parallels with the psychology
of anarchism.
Note that this is not an attempt to devalue the significance
of the individuation process on a personal level or to relate Singer’s work purely
to certain political interests in some glib and superficial manner!
Indeed, the processes that lead to inner realisation and
wholeness are as important for an anarchist as the external action that he or
she undertakes.
There would be nothing strange in this thought for Carl Jung,
immersed as he was in the alchemical tradition of microcosm and macrocosm, of
correspondences between all levels of existence.
Anyway, the paragraph that first leads us in that direction is
concerned with the reasons for which an individual develops a neurosis. Singer
explains that it is not some kind of random mental fault, but that there is a
purpose behind it.
She writes: “This involves correction of some conscious
attitude that prevents the individual from more fully realizing his total
capacity. When normal productive means of achieving one’s purpose are blocked
off, neurosis develops as an effort to find a way over or around the
obstruction.”
This echoes the metaphor of “antibodies” being activated to
fight off the mental disease currently affecting humanity. When the natural
self-correcting processes of society are blocked – by all the levels of
repression and control that protect the status quo – then a neurosis develops
as an “an effort to find a way over or around the obstruction”.
Those who look aghast at the confrontational approach
recommended by anarchists have failed to understand its context. While the
society to which anarchists look forward is peaceable and co-operative ( unlike
the current so-called “order” which has to be imposed by violent force), the path
to that is blocked and the only way to breach the block is to temporarily assume
a more pro-active form.
This urgent need for action on the social level is reflected
in Singer’s description of the individual process, when she says there is no
time for self-pity or regrets and that “today we know what our task is and,
therefore, today we must address ourselves to it”.
She writes that much individual emotional disturbance is due
to “a lack of correspondence between the conscious orientation and the
unconscious purposes” and we could continue the parallel on to the macrocosmic
social level.
Millions of people today simply cannot cope with living in
the modern world, in which our lives are so denuded of meaning. Increasing
numbers take anti-depressants, others take to drink or drugs, most somehow numb
themselves to a wider external reality that is too depressing or frightening to
really think about. The buried awareness of our plight is our shared
unconscious.
Meanwhile, at the same time, we are offered no alternative
to this world. The confines of permissible thought are drawn tightly around
variations on the same capitalist, industrialist, materialist theme. Anything
else is derided as laughable, unrealistic or dangerous. This, on a political
level, is our conscious orientation.
With an unconscious rejection of the modern world and a
conscious commitment to preserving it, there is clearly a significant lack of
correspondence between the two levels, leading to social neurosis.
The answer on an individual level, says Singer, is a third
element called “the transcendent function”, which belongs neither to the ego
sphere nor to the unconscious, and yet possesses access to each.
“It stands above them, participating in both. It is as
though ego and unconscious were points at either end of the baseline of a
triangle. The third element, at the apex of the triangle, transcends both the
point of the ego and the point of the unconscious but is related to each of
them.
The transcendent function’s emergence grants autonomy to the ego and also to the unconscious by relating to both of them independently, and in doing so, unites them”.
The transcendent function’s emergence grants autonomy to the ego and also to the unconscious by relating to both of them independently, and in doing so, unites them”.
This, on the larger scale, is the transcendent function of
anarchy. Rooted in the collective unconscious of humanity, it is connected to
the conscious political sphere but does not fully belong to it. The task for
anarchism is to transcend the other two elements and thereby to unite them.
We must bring out the loathing of the
capitalist-industrialist world that bubbles up in the unconscious soul of
humanity and incorporate it into the realm of reality, of politics if you like,
so that the neurosis of modernity can fulfil its purpose of freeing us from the
prison of this civilization and allowing us to live naturally to our fullest
and healthiest “total capacity”.
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