Subjectivity, Affect, and The Symbolic Order

Meaning, Madness & Political Subjectivity (Routledge, 2015)

 

This book explores the relationship between subjective experience and the cultural, political, and historical paradigms in which the individual is embedded. Providing a deep analysis of three compelling case studies of schizophrenia in Turkey, it addresses the ways in which private experience is shaped by collective structures, offering insights into issues surrounding religion, national and ethnic identity and tensions, modernity and tradition, madness, gender, and individuality. The book offers those studying political theory a way for conceptualizing the subjective within the political, it offers mental health clinicians and researchers a model for including political and historical realities in their psychological assessments and treatments, and it provides anthropologists with a model for theorizing culture in which psychological experience and political facts become understandable and explainable in terms of, rather than despite each other.

Meaning, Madness and Political Subjectivity (Routledge, 2015)

The Hauntology of Everyday Life

(Macmillan, 2021)

 

Standing in a homonymous yet deeply contradictory reference to Ontology, the term Hauntology (Fr. Hantologie) was proposed by   Derrida as a theoretical language capable of capturing the human experience of being –not the abstract philosophical idea of being, but the lived experience of being.  The spectral ghost –this peculiar form of “being” that is simultaneously present and absent, dead and alive, yet belongs neither to concrete reality nor to pure imagination –stands at the center of an analytic theory that understands subjective experience as an assortment of disjunctions threaded together by vectors of permanent deferral that simultaneously flow to and from an imaginary point of reference that is both the origin and the destination of human desire.

The Hauntology of Everday Life (Palgrave Macmillan, 2021)

Hauntological Justice (forthcoming)

 

Defined within the epistemological framework of hauntology, hauntological justice can be understood as an approach to justice that acknowledges the intricate and enduring impact of past injustices on the present, while promoting a nonbinary understanding of good and evil that transcends split-thinking and considers the complexities of historical and cultural contexts. As Derrida would insist, Justice is not a principle, let alone an axiom. It is a cry of the absolutely other, of that who can never be anticipated, calculated, or recognized in advance. The responsibility to the other is also a responsibility to the future. The political imperative of justice involves by default the position of the future, including a future that is essentially foreign or monstrous (see Acts of Religion).

Hauntological Justice by Sadeq Rahimi (forthcoming)

Artificial Subjectivity (upcoming)

 

The linguistic interpretation of hauntology has direct implications for theorizing the qualities of temporality, virtuality and spectrality of subjective experience.  This opens to a fruitful discussion of the role of futuricity in a hauntology of subjective experience. The space of individuality, of the nodal  subject as we have understood it, does not resonate with the ghost.  But the virtual, the networked multiplicity of the place of speech, comes quite close to actualizing the position of the ghost, if not its desire. The future of human subjectivity and the notion of artificial subjectivity are among the emerging theoretical directions inherent in the topic of hauntology.

Artificial Subjectivity by Sadeq Rahimi (forthcoming)