Engaging with Climate Change: Psychoanalytic and Interdisciplinary Perspectives

Front Cover
Sally Weintrobe
Routledge, 2013 - Medical - 255 pages

How can we help and support people to face climate change?

Engaging with Climate Change is one of the first books to explore in depth what climate change actually means to people. It brings members of a wide range of different disciplines in the social sciences together in discussion and to introduce a psychoanalytic perspective. The important insights that result have real implications for policy, particularly with regard to how to relate to people when discussing the issue. Topics covered include:

  • what lies beneath the current widespread denial of climate change
  • how do we manage our feelings about climate change   
  • our great difficulty in acknowledging our true dependence on nature
  • our conflicting identifications
  • the effects of living within cultures that have perverse aspects
  • the need to mourn before we can engage in a positive way with the new conditions we find ourselves in.

Through understanding these issues and adopting policies that recognise their implications humanity can hope to develop a response to climate change of the nature and scale necessary. Aimed at the general reader as well as psychoanalysts, psychotherapists and climate scientists, this book will deepen our understanding of the human response to climate change.

 

Contents

1 Introduction
1
2 What history can teach us about climate change denial
16
3 The difficult problem of anxiety in thinking about climate change
33
4 Climate change in a perverse culture
56
the psychodynamics of ecological debt
87
psychoanalytic explorations of environmental subjectivity
117
facing up to human nature
144
8 How is climate change an issue for psychoanalysis?
170
restoring split internal landscapes
199
10 Climate change uncertainty and risk
227
Index
241
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About the author (2013)

Sally Weintrobe, a practising psychoanalyst, is a Fellow of the Institute of Psychoanalysis in London. She sees a psychoanalytic approach as a vital part of understanding how to engage people about the seriousness of climate change and how to understand current levels of denial. She has written and lectured widely on these subjects and on our relationship with nature. Her commitment to fostering interdisciplinary exchange with other human scientists about engaging with climate change has led to this remarkable book.