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WSWS
: History
: Russia
& the former Soviet Union
Intrepid thought: psychoanalysis in the Soviet UnionPart
2
By Frank Brenner
12 June 1999
Use
this version to print
This is the second, and concluding, section of a two-part
article. The first part was posted on Friday, June 11.
Part 2.
A detailed account of the Soviet debates isn't possible here,
but it would be useful to consider a few of the most common criticisms
that were raised so as to shed light on the issue of the compatibility
of Marxism and psychoanalysis.
First and foremost was the view that, according to Freud, sex
is everything. This is known in the literature as the theory of
pan-sexualism and it is a caricature that has dogged
psychoanalysis since its inception. In the Stalinist era, this
image of psychoanalysis became so commonplace in the Soviet Union
that Freud and his ideas became quite literally dirty words, associated
with sexual depravity.[1]
In truth, however, (as Alexander Luria pointed out) pan-sexualism
was as much a vulgarization of psychoanalysis as the notion that
economics is everything was a vulgarization of Marxism.[2]
To begin with, sexuality was never the only instinct in Freudian
theory; just as fundamental was the instinct of self-preservation.
This was critical because the centerpiece of psychoanalysis, its
theory of neurosis, held that neurotic illness arose from a conflict
between instincts, and for a conflict to take place, sex couldn't
be everything.[3] But, of course, it was also true
that sexuality did play a prominent role in psychoanalysis, which
dealt with this instinct honestly and objectively. This was the
real sticking point because, for centuries, sexuality had been
treated as sin, as weakness, as something morally repulsive and
degrading. The sin of psychoanalysis was that it brought
sexuality out into the open and uncovered its many hiding
places in the mind, the family and society at large.
There was also a basic confusion over the meaning of sexuality:
many of Freud's critics understood the term in its conventional
sense, i.e., as genital intercourse for reproduction, so that
much of psychoanalytic theory, especially about the sexual life
of children, must have seemed absurd. But the conventional notion
of sexuality was itself problematic: it couldn't account for a
broad range of behaviors from children masturbating to homosexuality
to perversions such as sadism and masochism. Freud broadened the
concept of sexuality (in an entirely materialist direction) by
defining it as the function of obtaining pleasure from zones
of the body,[4] which opened the way to explaining not only
the diversity but also the evolution of sexual behavior. And,
via the concepts of repression and sublimation, it also opened
the way to a materialist understanding of emotions: by showing
that love and hate (and their various permutations and combinations)
had instinctual roots in sexuality, psychoanalysis dealt a major
blow to the metaphysical notion of spirit and thus
to every brand of religion and mystification that relied on it.
(Today, in reading the Soviet criticism of Freud from this
period, one is struck by how little discussion there was of sexuality.
For the most part the issue was dismissed out of handeven
by critics who were themselves opponents of Stalinismas
being so obviously a symptom of the decadence of bourgeois culture
as not to merit serious consideration. One of the points Trotsky
felt called upon to make in intervening in the debates was that
the analysis of sexuality was a legitimate concern and that, whatever
differences there might be in evaluating its significance, this
is already a dispute within the frontiers of materialism.[5]
But Stalinism had simply made it impossible by then to have an
open and honest engagement of this dispute. This meant that in
much of the Soviet criticism of psychoanalysis there was no account
taken of one of the foundations of that theory.)
The second major issue was the relationship of individual to
social psychology. Freud's critics charged that in psychoanalysis
the individual was seen as an isolated being, entirely apart from
society. There were good grounds for this criticism: like most
scientists in bourgeois society, Freud was only a materialist
in his own field, and his theory had no coherent materialist perspective
with regard to history or sociology. (And, not surprisingly, this
vacuum tended to be filled in an idealist way, often with psychology
entirely supplanting history and sociology.)
But it was also true that a psychology that dug deeply enough
into the lives of individuals was bound to come up against the
bedrock of social life. As Freud himself observed: In the
individual's mental life someone else is invariably involved,
as a model, as an object [i.e., of desire], as a helper, as an
opponent; and so from the very first individual psychology ...
is at the same time social psychology as well.[6] (Indeed,
in Freudian theory, an infant can only become an ego
or an I by entering into a relationship with another
human beingits mother.) Thus, rather than being an escape
from social life, psychoanalysis could offer a unique and potentially
valuable viewpoint on it by uncovering the psychological process
by which the individual becomes socialized.
The first theorist to perceive that value came from the Soviet
psychoanalytic movement. His name was Mikhail Reisner, another
remarkable figure in a remarkable generation. One of the few Russian
academics to side with the Bolsheviks, he helped draft the first
Soviet constitution, worked with Lunacharsky in revamping higher
education, helped found the Communist Academy, and then headed
the social psychology division at the Institute of Experimental
Psychology. (He was also the father of the celebrated Bolshevik
activist and writer Larisa Reisner.[7])
In two lengthy essays from the mid-twenties, Reisner opened
up the discussion of the relationship between individual and social
psychology. His first essay was about religion, and here he raised
an intriguing problem: from a Marxist standpoint, it was evident
why religion was necessary to the ruling class, but it wasn't
evident why the masses would find religion appealing. Here, Reisner
argued, Marxism needed to be supplemented by a psychology of religion,
and the key to that lay in Freudian theory. The appeal of religion
was that it provided a solace for feelings of worthlessness and
dependence (and, one might add, guilt), feelings that themselves
grew out of unresolved infantile sexual conflicts and fantasies.
It was a type of solace, of course, that was designed to support
traditional class hierarchies: by preaching humility, submission
and self-abnegation, it redirected (or displaced)
emotional conflicts in such a way as to make them the psychological
ground for social conformity.
(Marx in some of his early writings discussed the appeal that
religion had to the masses subjected to exploitation and misery.
He described religion as the fantastic realization of the
human being inasmuch as the human being possesses no true reality....
Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the sentiment
of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions.
This profound insight into the social psychology of religious
belief was in line with the insights into individual psychology
that Reisner had drawn from Freud. From Miller's summary, however,
it isn't clear whether Reisner was aware of or to what extent
he took account of Marx's ideas.)
In any case, what was true about religion could be applied
to ruling class ideology as a whole, and in his second essay Reisner
tried to deal with these wider implications. Since, as Marxism
contended, the dominant ideology of any class society was the
ideology of the ruling class, this meant that the oppressed for
the most part accepted the ideology of their oppressors, and again,
the question was why? Perceptively, Reisner drew attention to
the mythology of the patriarchal family, noting, for instance,
the manipulation of mass sentiment evident in the image of the
tsar as the little father or the characterization
of a nation state as a fatherland or motherland.
What was being fostered here was a symbolic identification,
one which served to mitigate social problems and unconscious emotional
conflicts in an illusory way. Reisner had hit upon something vitally
important herethe way in which class society anchors itself
emotionally in each individual. The key to that process
was the family, the ideological nucleus of society,
as Reich once called it.[8]
In the traditional family, parents become the prototype of
authority figures to whom the child submits far less out of fear
than out of love, which is a much more effective kind of submission
and one that can be made use of, once the child has grown up,
by the various institutions of bourgeois society, from a company
to a government to an army. Mother Jones, the famous American
labor militant, tells a story which illustrates quite vividly
how this emotional identification functions in everyday life.
On her way to work one day in a South Carolina textile mill, she
met a woman carrying a baby coming home from the night shift:
How old is the baby? Three days. I just went
back this morning. The boss was good and saved my place.
When did you leave? The boss was good; he let
me off early the night the baby was born. What do
you do with the baby while you work? Oh, the boss
is good and he lets me have a little box with a pillow in it beside
the loom. The baby sleeps there and when it cries, I nurse it.[9]
Nowhere was this exploitation of mass psychology taken further
than in fascist ideology, which was saturated in family symbols
and metaphors, most obviously the führer as a
stern father figure and the nation as a fatherland. Reisner's
ideas could have been of great help to a revolutionary movement
fighting fascist mystification, and indeed a similar line of thinking
about mass psychology was later developed by Marxist analysts,
such as Reich, Otto Fenichel and Erich Fromm, who lived through
the rise of Nazism in the thirties. But by then Reisner's work
was languishing in obscurity and the German labor movement was
fatally disoriented, both circumstances ultimately due to the
same causeStalinism. Still, Reisner's contribution to the
Soviet debates on psychoanalysis in the twenties demonstrated
the important theoretical insights that could be gained through
a reworking of Freudian theory along Marxist lines.
There remains one further issue that deserves some comment:
what is a science of the mind? For one thing, psychoanalysis didn't
conform to the usual image of a science. It was interpretative
rather than empirical and had none of the reproducible experiments
or quantifiable data one expects to find in hard sciences
such as physics or chemistry. Also, it dealt mostly with dreams,
emotions, slips of the tongue, forgetting names, etc.some
of these extremely fleeting aspects of mental life and all of
them having to do with how we experience ourselves subjectively.
In the Soviet Union at that time, the theory of reflexes was very
much in vogue, associated with the renowned figure of Ivan Pavlov
(and influential psychologists like Vladimir Bekhterev). Here
was an approach to the mind that was solidly objective and scientific,
and it became commonplace in the Soviet debates to counterpose
the materialism of Pavlov to the supposed idealism of Freud.
But this view of the matter obscured something deeply problematic
about reflex theoryits reductionism. Feelings, dreams, even
consciousnessnone of these were considered real, so far
as the proponents of an objective psychology were
concerned. A typical example was the critique of Freud by the
famous literary critical theorist Mikhail Bakhtin. He argued that
when a person thinks about his mental life in terms of feelings,
desires, and presentations [i.e., perceptions], this was
an illusion, and that in an objective analysis we shall
find no such elements anywhere in the makeup of behavior. External,
objective apprehension has to rely on differentmaterialelementary
components of behavior, components that have nothing in common
with desires, feelings, and presentations.[10]
The problem was that if the mind really were reduced to components
that had nothing in common with subjective experience,
then the mind itself would all but disappear. If we were to take
something as simple as a smile, we could conceivably discover
a mountain of data about the reflexes, neural circuitry, biochemistry,
etc., that went into producing this behavior, but all this information
would tell us nothing about its meaning, nothing about
the feelings of the person (and these could range from happiness
to pride to anxiety to cynicism, etc.) that made him behave this
way.
It was the personthe human subjectwho got lost
in such a conception of the mind. And this had consequences not
just for individual psychology, but for social psychology as well,
since in principle class consciousness was just as reducible to
elementary components of behavior as love or anger.
Thus, even Marx wasn't safe from this kind of reductionism, as
the following remark of a Soviet reflexologist indicates: Marx's
law, social existence determines consciousness,' naturally
referred not to consciousness' but to the external form
of man's behavior. For sociology, consciousness has no significance.
Its task is to talk only of behavior, of man's adaptive activity.[11]
One shudders to think what a supposedly Marxist sociology would
look like that held to the view that consciousness has no
significance.
Engels, with great prescience, had foreseen this problem in
a comment he made in Dialectics of Nature: One day
we shall certainly reduce' thought experimentally to molecular
and chemical motions in the brain; but does that exhaust the essence
of thought?[12] Those who thought it did were putting forward
an essentially mechanical view of the mind. Their reductionism
took no account of the qualitative difference between physiology
and psychology. The mind wasn't merely brain function, any more
than it was merely a mirror-like reflection of external reality.
Here, an important but as yet largely unknown contribution
made by Trotsky needs to be considered. (In the debates of the
twenties, Trotsky intervened primarily to argue against the simplistic
counterposing of Pavlov and Freud: The idealists tell us
that the psyche is an independent entity, that the soul'
is a bottomless well. Both Pavlov and Freud think that the bottom
of the soul' is physiology. But Pavlov, like a diver, descends
to the bottom and laboriously investigates the well from there
upwards, while Freud stands over the well and with a penetrating
gaze tries to pierce its ever-shifting and troubled waters and
to make out or guess the shape of things down below.[13]
But Trotsky's interest in psychoanalysis went back to 1908 when,
through Joffe, he had become acquainted with Alfred Adler, then
one of Freud's leading disciples, and devoted some time to reading
Freudian theory and attending meetings on psychoanalysis. The
influence of psychoanalytic ideas is evident in passages of a
number of his writings, particularly those on art and his autobiography,
My Life.) In the thirties, Trotsky, then in exile, returned
to the question of psychology in some unpublished notes that only
saw the light of day a half century later. These notes, amounting
to a half dozen printed pages, were his most extensive discussion
of the subject and his focus was on what distinguished a dialectical
from a mechanical approach. In essence, they unfold a line of
thought that is implicit in Engels's comment.
Trotsky's first point was that there wasn't a simple or direct
identity between consciousness and the rest of nature. Consciousness
is a quite original part of nature, possessing peculiarities
and regularities that are completely absent in the remaining part
of nature. Subjective dialectics must by virtue of this be a distinctive
part of objective dialecticswith its own special forms and
regularities. As to the view that consciousness was merely
a manifestation of the physiology of the brain, if this were the
case then one would have to ask: What is the need of consciousness?
If consciousness has no independent function, which rises
above physiological processes in the brain and nerves,
then it is unnecessary, useless; it is harmful because it is a
superfluous complicationand what a complication!
What such reductive views ignored was that there was a a
break in the gradualness, a transition from quantity into quality
between physiology and psychology: the psyche, arising from
matter, is freed' from the determinism of matter, so that
it can independentlyby its own lawsinfluence matter.
For that reason, and despite the frequent tendency of Freudians
to veer off in idealist directions, the method of psychoanalysis,
taking as its point of departure the autonomy' of psychological
phenomena, in no way contradicts materialism. Quite the contrary,
it is precisely dialectical materialism that prompts us to the
idea that the psyche could not even be formed unless it played
an autonomous, that is, within certain limits, an independent
role in the life of the individual and the species.[14]
From a philosophical standpoint, it would be hard to make a more
convincing case for the compatibility of Marxism and psychoanalysis.
(Trotsky's views on psychoanalysis deserve a more extensive
discussion than can be presented here. The editor of the notebooks,
Philip Pomper, contends that Trotsky was pointing the way towards
a new and revolutionary interpretation of psychoanalysis: Trotsky
had made the unconscious less a source of human miserya
realm of darkness and primitivenessthan a reservoir of primal
energy.... He had transformed the pessimistic Freudian vision
of the role of the unconscious into an optimistic revolutionary
one. The unconscious mind's resources might be pressed into the
service of revolution. In this respect, Trotsky was a forerunner
of thinkers like [Herbert] Marcuse, who not only saw connections
between the repression of Eros and social domination, but believed
that the unconscious was not merely a burden, that it contained
creative resources that might further historical progress.[15]
This is a fascinating pointone of many in regards to this
historythat deserves further consideration.)
The outcome of the debates on psychoanalysis was decided not
by force of argument but by bureaucratic fiat: as of 1930, all
activities of the Soviet psychoanalytic movement were halted and
the only mention permitted of Freudian theory from then on was
for the purpose of denouncing it. Like so many other promising
cultural developments nourished by the revolution, psychoanalysis
was uprooted and destroyed by Stalinist terror. Ironically, though
this suppression was carried out in the name of Marxism, the instinctive
hostility with which the Stalinist bureaucrats regarded psychoanalysis
was yet a further indication of the underlying affinity of psychoanalysis
to genuine Marxism. And it has to be said that this attack
was more than just a case of intolerance typical of a totalitarian
regime: if the Soviet Freudians were righti.e., if psychoanalysis
really had uncovered fundamental truths about human naturethen
what was really under attack, in the deepest sense, was the socialist
ideal of a transformed human nature, of a fully human personality.
Stalinism, it needs to be understood, represented the revenge
of everything backward and retrogressive on the revolution. The
Bolsheviks had taken power counting on the world revolution to
come to their aid and alleviate the terrible material hardship
(greatly compounded by the devastation of war and imperialist
economic blockade) that Russia faced. The idea that one could
build socialism in one countryto say nothing
of a country as backward as Russia would have struck them
as absurd. Socialism required a level of economic development
beyond the most advanced capitalism, a level that would allow
for eliminating material scarcity and the competition for goods
that such scarcity inevitably engenders. Where there isn't enough
to go around for everyone, Marx once observed, the struggle
for necessities begins again, and that means that all the old
crap must revive.[16] Here, as Trotsky pointed out, was
the key to understanding Stalinism: it was the political expression
of all the old crap being revived within the Soviet
Union because the revolution hadn't succeeded outside its borders.
In the realm of personal life, the revival of the old
crap meant a profound reversal in the relationship of the
individual to society. As a Russian social historian has observed:
The aim of changing social conditions, adapting them to
the needs of individual human beings, which was the essence of
the original Marxist theory of alienation, was gradually reformulated
as the task of adapting human behaviors, needs, and even feelings
to the extant poor and inhuman social conditions.[17] In
other words, a return to repression andmost hateful of alla
return to putting the blame on individuals for the misery of their
lives. In education, the thirties began with steps being taken
to restore the teacher to his rightful place in the school.[18]
Soon, learning by rote was back with a vengeance, so much so that,
by the sixties, opponents of progressive education in the West
were holding up Soviet educational methods as an example to be
emulated. In law, crime, punishment and
guilt were back on the books by the early thirties,
and children as young as 12 were being dealt with as adults by
the courts. A writer in Pravda declared at the time that
children who committed crimes must be made aware that they
will not be fed on lollipops.[19]
But it was in the area of family and sexual relations that
the revival of the old crap was especially noticeable.
The Bolsheviks had brought in full legal equality for women, the
right to abortion, the ending of marriage as a legal and religious
institution and the decriminalization of homosexualityfar
and away the most progressive policy of any government in the
world and an inspiration to opponents of sexual oppression everywhere.
It was an impressive beginning towards tackling the enormous social
problem of restructuring the family, but it was only a beginning.
Indeed, in the short run, some of these measures actually created
more problems than they solved: the breakdown of the traditional
family made women more vulnerable to sexual exploitation and led
to an increase in child neglect, while legalized abortion produced
a drastic decline in the birth rate. The difficulty, as Trotsky
pointed out, was that you cannot abolish' the family;
you have to replace it.[20] The old patriarchal structure
was breaking down under the impact of the revolution, but the
new structure of the collective family was still too undevelopedstill
too economically malnourishedto replace it.
The Stalinist solution was to bolster the old,
oppressive structure. Abortion was outlawed, marriage was re-institutionalized
and divorce made more difficult and expensive: the woman was back
in her place of domestic servitude and, to make her
accept it, the regime preached the joys of motherhood.
In the same period, homosexuality was re-criminalized, a ban on
pornography (deliberately defined in vague and sweeping terms)
was brought in, all scientific research into sexuality was halted
and sex education was replaced by moral education.[21]
The lessons of Vera Schmidt's experimental school were, of
course, completely ignored, and the existence of infantile sexuality
was simply denied in theory and punished in practice. An experience
Reich had while visiting a Soviet school in 1929 was indicative
in this regard: I was standing at the window of a kindergarten
room which led into the garden. We were speaking with the head
teacher. Outside, the children were playing, and I saw a little
boy pull out his penis and let a little girl look at it. The children
were near a tree. This happened just as the teacher was reassuring
us that in her kindergarten such things as masturbation
and sexuality did not occur.[22]
Trotsky once aptly described the Stalinist attitude to matters
like abortion as combining the philosophy of a priest ...
with the powers of a gendarme.[23] But underlying the moral
hypocrisy was, again, the standpoint of adapting human needs
to inhuman social conditions, and with regard to sexuality,
one such condition was especially noteworthythe woeful inadequacy
of housing. As a recent history of Russian sexuality points out:
Millions of people were forced to live for yearsand
many throughout their entire livesin hostels or communal
apartments, where several families shared one flat. Adult children
frequently lived in a single room with their parents. How can
one talk of sexual intimacy when everything is in view and within
earshot? And the possibility for doing anything unconventionale.g.,
pre-marital, extra-marital or homosexual sexwas even more
hopeless. A remark by a Moscow resident captured the grimness
of having to live this way: We are born in the hallway,
we make love in the hallway, and we die in the hallway.[24]
These were the conditions that made the revival of the old
crap of sexual puritanism an ideological necessity to the
Stalinist gendarmes.
Psychoanalysis was incompatible, not with Marxism, but with
a policy of adapting human needs to inhuman conditions. It was
incompatible with propaganda about the joys of motherhood and
family, because it revealed the shameful truth behind
that propagandathe psychosexual tensions within family relationships
and the psychic damage inflicted on children by a traditional
family upbringing. It was incompatible with sexual puritanism
and with criminalizing sexual behavior like homosexuality. It
was incompatible with ignorance about the sexual needs of children
and with mistreating them because of that ignorance.
The Stalinists understood this quite clearly in their own way.
In 1930, a major academic gathering, the Congress on Human Behavior,
was organized in Moscow for the purpose of, among other things,
sounding the death knell of Soviet Freudianism. The keynote speaker,
Aron Zalkind, delivered a diatribe against psychoanalysis full
of sarcasm and mockery (notwithstanding the fact that several
years earlier, in a different political climate, he had been a
defender of the theory he was now denouncing). But one of Zalkind's
remarks is revealing, albeit inadvertently: How can we use
the Freudian conception of man for socialist construction? We
need a socially open' man who is easily collectivized, and
quickly and profoundly transformed in his behaviora man
capable of being a steady, conscious, and independent person,
politically and ideologically well trained.[25] This was
a conception of man as a cipher, empty of any human needsof
any humanityand thus capable of being molded at will to
fit the political exigencies of so-called socialist construction.
Needless to say, Freudian man was completely useless
for such a purpose.
As for the Soviet Freudians, a few left the country, but most
either kept their thoughts to themselves or adapted to the new
state of affairs. (Whether any of them ended up in a gulag is
unclear from Miller's account.) Reisner was spared the worst of
this, having died in 1929. Vygotsky and Luria were subjected to
public criticism. In a letter to Luria after attending a lecture
in which he was attacked, Vygotsky appraised the situation as
being one where the party had decided that the two of them would
be beaten, but not killed.[26] They both severed any
organizational ties they had with the psychoanalytic movement
and Luria published a number of officially approved denunciations
of psychoanalysis which saved his career. Vygotsky died of tuberculosis
in 1934. Although in his theoretical views he had moved away from
psychoanalysis in the last period of his life, his ideas were
no more serviceable to Stalinism than Freud's had
been. Thus, his works were banned or left unpublished for two
decades after his death, and the versions that finally did come
out were edited to remove any references to disapproved-of figures,
including Trotsky.[27]
As for some of the others, Vera Schmidt seems to have made
her peace with Stalinism, at least if we are to judge from a remark
attributed to her by Otto Fenichel.[28] Sabina Spielrein made
her last theoretical contribution to psychoanalysis in 1933, after
which all that is known about her is that she was shot to death
by invading Nazi troops in 1941; her fatesilenced by Stalin,
murdered by Hitlerhas something emblematic about it.
We look back on this history across a wide gulf of time filled
with momentous events from the rise of fascism and world war to
the postwar boom and the eventual collapse of the Soviet Union.
Today conventional wisdom holds that the ideas of both Marx and
Freud are dead, and so the efforts of the Soviet Freudians
to develop a synthesis of these ideas must seem quixotic, a sad
footnote to the great tragic misunderstanding that was the Russian
Revolution.
But in a world wracked by economic breakdown and military conflict,
it is conventional wisdom that badly needs to be called into question.
Recently, two American academics, writing about the current crisis
in psychology, noted that the one big problem with the schools
that dominate the field today (cognitive psychology, neuropsychology,
developmental psychology and artificial intelligence) is that
they remove the human from psychology.[29]
It would be hard to imagine a more devastating criticism, and
one that could be applied to much else in contemporary culture
besides psychology. The orientation of Soviet psychoanalysis was
completely differenttowards a deeper understanding of humanity
(which was why it thrived in the revolution and why the betrayers
of that revolution had to destroy it). And that was also the orientation
of the various attempts in this centuryby the Soviet Freudians,
the German Freudo-Marxists, the French Surrealists and othersto
rework psychoanalysis from a Marxist perspective, because out
of that theoretical synthesis a vision of a new lifeof a
life lived to the full measure of human potential in a world made
to meet human needscould emerge. That is why the revival
of Marxism will also mean the revival of psychoanalysis: when
the building of a new life is again on the agenda, then we will
need to know how to put the human back into psychology. In this
sense, this history is still very much alive, because it reveals
to us not only a record of the past, but also a view of the future.
See Also:
Intrepid thought: psychoanalysis in the
Soviet Union - Part One
[11 June 1999]
Notes:
1. Igor S. Kon, The Sexual Revolution
in Russia (New York: 1995), p. 80.
2. A.R. Luria, Psychoanalysis as a System of Monistic Psychology
(1925) in The Selected Writings of A. R. Luria (White Plains:
1978), p. 37, n.32.
3. Though Freud revised his instinct theory in the early twenties,
bringing in a highly speculative notion of a death instinct, the
new version was no more "pan-sexualist" than the previous
one had been.
4. Sigmund Freud, An Outline of Psychoanalysis (1938) in
The Pelican Freud Library, Vol. 15 (London: 1986), p. 383.
5. Leon Trotsky, Culture and Socialism (1926) in Problems
of Everyday Life (New York: 1973), p. 233.
6. Sigmund Freud, Group Psychology and the Analysis of the
Ego (1921) in The Pelican Freud Library, vol. 12, (London:
1985), p. 95.
7. Thanks to Prof. Miller for this information.
8. Wilhelm Reich, Dialectical Materialism and Psychoanalysis
(1929) in Sex-Pol (New York: 1972), p. 26.
9. The Autobiography of Mother Jones (Chicago: [1925]/1980),
pp. 123-24.
10. V.N. Voloshinov, Freudianism: A Critical Sketch (Bloomington:
[1927]/1987), p. 69. Voloshinov was a disciple of Bakhtin and
the authorship of this work is disputed.
11. The New Man in Soviet Psychology, p. 69. The quote
is from G.N. Sorokhtin, a pupil of Bekhterev.
12. Frederick Engels, Dialectics of Nature (New York: 1940),
p. 175.
13. Problems of Everyday Life, p. 234.
14. Leon Trotsky, Trotsky's Notebooks, 1933-1935: Writings
on Lenin, Dialectics, and Evolutionism (New York: 1986), pp.
101-7.
15. Philip Pomper, Introductory Essay: Notes on Dialectics
and Evolutionism in Trotsky's Notebooks, 1933-1935,
pp. 72-73.
16. Quoted in Leon Trotsky, The Revolution Betrayed (Detroit:
[1937]/1991), p. 48.
17. The Sexual Revolution in Russia, p. 56
18. The New Man in Soviet Psychology, p. 45.
19. Ibid., pp. 40-41.
20. The Revolution Betrayed, p. 124.
21. The Sexual Revolution in Russia, pp. 70-76.
22. The Struggle for a New Life' in the Soviet Union,
p. 289.
23. The Revolution Betrayed, p. 128.
24. The Sexual Revolution in Russia, p. 81.
25. Quoted in Freud and the Bolsheviks, p. 102.
26. Ibid., p. 107.
27. René van der Veer, Some Major Themes in Vygotsky's
Theoretical Work. An Introduction in The Collected Works
of L. S. Vygotsky, vol. 3 (New York: 1997), p. 2.
28. Russell Jacoby, The Repression of Psychoanalysis (Chicago:
1986), p. 121.
29. R.W. Rieber and Jeffrey Wollock, Vygotsky's Crisis,'
and Its Meaning Today in The Collected Works of L. S.
Vygotsky, vol. 3 (New York: 1997), p. xi.
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