Testimonies during the pandemic: psychoanalytic reflections on trauma, State, economy and death
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0104-12902021200435Keywords:
Pandemics, Covid-19, Coronavirus, Psychoanalysis, Social TheoryAbstract
This study aims to reflect on the subject’s experience in the face of the covid-19 pandemic by a psychoanalytic perspective. The material analyzed discursively was constituted by testimonies of undergraduate psychology students published in a virtual space during the period of social distance. The subjectivation processes emphasized in our analysis were discussed in four thematic groups: facing the traumatic potential: being able to witness the fall of the Other; the (un)protection of the subjects by the State: the potentiation of psychological suffering; the superegoic imperative of capitalist production and the productive traces of unproductivity, and (im possibilities of mourning: changes in our attitude towards death. Finally, we seek to critically evidence the destructive and authoritarian aspect of the state management of affections on subjects and the transformative power (analytical and political) of the experiences of unproductivity, indeterminacy and helplessness.