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Adorno’s Minima Moralia and the Critique of Psychoanalysis

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As an occasional feature on TELOSscope, we highlight a past Telos article whose critical insights continue to illuminate our thinking and challenge our assumptions. Today, Lillian Hingley looks at Shannon Mariotti's "Damaged Life as Exuberant Vitality in America: Adorno, Alienation, and the Psychic Economy" from Telos 149 (Winter 2009).

In her article "Damaged Life as Exuberant Vitality in America: Adorno, Alienation, and the Psychic Economy," from Telos 149 (Winter 2009), Shannon Mariotti claims that Adorno's Minima Moralia ultimately rejects psychoanalysis for reinforcing the reification that it was supposed to resist. She argues that Adorno is particularly concerned with an American psychodynamic therapy that empties psychoanalysis of its European "pessimism" and that instead seeks "happiness" rather than a mere "cure." While some points in Mariotti's argument and a more critical psychoanalysis are not incompatible, her cautious application of Adorno's critique of psychoanalysis to a contemporary context suggests that Minima Moralia might provide a useful framework for interpreting modern American pharmaceutical psychology. In turn, this brief analysis adds context to Mariotti's grant of practical space to mental illness in therapy rather than seeing it as something to be merely glossed over. Indeed, she gives today's readers a blueprint for carefully applying Adorno's thinking to contemporary American therapeutic practices.

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