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The Ideology of Hatred

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The book advances a new theoretical framework for understanding the politics of national hatred as a discourse which characterizes today's many national, ethnic and religious conflicts. It offers a...
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  • 24 December 2012
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The 21st century might well be called the age of hatred. This is not because there is more violence in the world but because hatred has been transformed from a concept perceived to be a by-product of personal or collective violence into a discursive field.

But what if longstanding antagonisms, especially those between social groups, turned out to involve desire rather than revulsion? The Ideology of Hatred develops a psychosocial framework for understanding this new phenomenon by interrogating unconscious mechanisms within national discourse. It opens new and timely venues for thinking about the paradoxes of love and hate while raising questions about social attachment and otherness. Is it possible that hatred operates by maintaining a safe closeness, enhancing the illusion of separateness as well as a sense of proximity at one and the same time? Could it be that love actually survives through the discourse of hatred as an invisible relation of attachment, necessary but unthinkable? A key term in the book is the “political unconscious,” a concept signifying the transformation of the unthinkable into a language that disavows the desire of and for the Other. Invoking this and other psychoanalytic concepts, the book proposes that at the heart of all national conflicts lies a riddle: the enigma of desire. The discourse of hatred works today as both a defense mechanism and as a political fantasy whose dream is to annihilate the Other of desire, that familial and different, threatening and intimate Other. Yet because love-in-hatred is denied but not erased, love can therefore also be reimagined. This suggests that untying and recognizing relations of intimacy and dependency can, under certain circumstances, change the discourse of hatred into relations of peace and even friendship.

In addition to its strong theoretical component, the book is also based on extensive empirical research, especially into hate relations among Jews and between Jews and Palestinians in Israel.

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Price: $88.00
Pages: 168
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Imprint: Fordham University Press
Publication Date: 24 December 2012
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780823250042
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: PHILOSOPHY / Good & Evil, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / General, PSYCHOLOGY / Psychotherapy / Psychoanalysis
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“Yanay’s work on gender, violence, and relationality is critical and probing. The Ideology of Hatred contains discussions that are simply excellent: singular, disorientating, and original.”---—Judith Butler, University of California, Berkeley

“Yanay’s reading of theoretical texts, coupled with her intimate understanding of political conflict, is startlingly new.”---—Noelle McAfee, Emory University
Niza Yanay is an Associate Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at Ben Gurion University.