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Raising a true socialist individual: Yugoslav psychoanalysis and the creation of democratic Marxist citizens

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posted on 2025-07-31, 22:50 authored by A Antic
This article explores the surprisingly successful development of psychoanalysis in socialist Yugoslavia, and the discipline’s relationship with both Western paradigms and Yugoslavia’s own theory of workers’ self-management. The article focuses primarily on child psychotherapy and psychoanalysis, and their attempts at reforming traditional Balkan ‘authoritarian’ families and helping raise democratic Marxist citizens. It argues that Yugoslav psychiatrists and psychoanalysts developed their own version of revolutionary and activist psychoanalysis, which was meant to contribute to a broad political and cultural discussion in Yugoslavia about constructing a society based on genuine Marxist collective and individual emancipation, an alternative to both Stalinist state socialism and Western capitalism/liberal democracy. Many psychiatrists, psychotherapists and psychoanalysts used overtly political language to frame their professional aims and experiences, and turned their consulting rooms into revolutionary sites. West European practices and theories of child psychoanalysis and psychotherapy figured prominently in Yugoslav clinical discussions and practice, but they were regularly linked to the broader goals of Marxist revolutionary politics, workers' self-management or socialist struggle against patriarchy or ‘bureaucratised’ political relations. For that reason, the Yugoslav experiment, in which a new activist psychoanalysis became mainstream and state-funded psychotherapy, remains central to understanding the role of psychoanalysis as a tool for socio-political critique and activism in the second half of the twentieth century.

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© 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

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This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routledge) via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Social History

Publisher

Taylor & Francis (Routledge)

Language

en

Citation

Vol. 44 (1), pp. 86-115.

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