Why Wall? A Kleinian Reading of the Israeli-Palestinian Resistance to Politics

Authors

  • Maya Mukamel

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5399/uo/konturen.4.0.2961

Abstract

The present work explores the separation barriers built by the Israeli government and military as products and producers of asymmetries of power between Israelis and Palestinians; and, at the same time, as products and producers of discourses that are characterized by the naturalization of evil. In such discourses, evil is singularized as a unique cultural property of the national adversary; violence and aggression on the part of the adversary are perceived as a sign of a primitive morality, detached from political and historical circumstances; and violence of each party is justified as a defensive war on the “evil” other. A return to Melanie Klein allows to trace these dynamics, and to raise fundamental questions on the role of the cultural analyst.

Author Biography

Maya Mukamel

Maya Mukamel is a clinical psychologist and a facilitator of conflict group encounters. She is a co-founder and an active member of Psychoactive – Mental Health Professionals for Human Rights. She teaches in The Graduate School of Creative Art Therapies at the University of Haifa. Her writings are on the history and philosophy of psychoanalytic ideas, gender and psychotherapy, Israeli occupation and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Her current research is on the concept of dissociation and its application in psychoanalytic practice.

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Published

2012-11-10

How to Cite

Mukamel, M. (2012). Why Wall? A Kleinian Reading of the Israeli-Palestinian Resistance to Politics. Konturen, 4, 89–107. https://doi.org/10.5399/uo/konturen.4.0.2961