‘Only mothers can be true revolutionaries’: The Politicization of Motherhood in 1980s West German Psychoanalysis

  • Schmacks Y
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Abstract

Analyzing conceptualizations of motherhood in 1980s West German psychoanalytic debates, this article argues that, in the wake of what can be termed as a ‘turn to motherhood,’ German psychoanalysis saw an unprecedented politicization of motherhood that followed from a conjunction of three distinct historical contexts: the integration of feminist theories of subjectivity into the psychoanalytic canon; the belated reception of the British object relations school; and the renewed attempt at grappling with the Nazi past. On the one hand, West German (female) psychoanalysts posited motherhood as a utopian space that allowed for uncorrupted forms of intersubjectivity in the form of an intimate and sexualized mother–child/mother–daughter relationship. On the other hand, and mirroring this ideal, motherhood, if not practiced correctly, could, according to psychoanalytically inspired thinkers in the late 1980s, also be a source of fascism.

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Schmacks, Y. (2021). ‘Only mothers can be true revolutionaries’: The Politicization of Motherhood in 1980s West German Psychoanalysis. Psychoanalysis and History, 23(1), 49–73. https://doi.org/10.3366/pah.2021.0368

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