TY - JOUR
T1 - From the therapeutic to the post-therapeutic
T2 - The resilient subject, its social imaginary, and its practices in the shadow of 9/11
AU - Brunner, José
AU - Plotkin Amrami, Galia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2019.
PY - 2019/4/1
Y1 - 2019/4/1
N2 - In the aftermath of 9/11, the concept of psychological resilience, which refers to the ability to “bounce back” after adversity, became prominent across the American mental health community. Resilience thinking made its way quickly into the U.S. military, where it sparked the most expensive psychological intervention program in history. This article interweaves four strands of explanation—political, scientific, technological, and cultural—to account for the success of resilience thinking in the U.S. military and beyond. It shows that theories and practices of psychological resilience are not as novel as their proponents make them out to be. However, it also details how the ideal of a post-therapeutic, resilient subject became the cornerstone of a new, post-9/11 social imaginary. This article concludes that the contemporary ascendancy of psychological resilience indicates that rather than allying itself with the therapeutic as it had done previously, post-9/11 neoliberalism has moved toward the post-therapeutic.
AB - In the aftermath of 9/11, the concept of psychological resilience, which refers to the ability to “bounce back” after adversity, became prominent across the American mental health community. Resilience thinking made its way quickly into the U.S. military, where it sparked the most expensive psychological intervention program in history. This article interweaves four strands of explanation—political, scientific, technological, and cultural—to account for the success of resilience thinking in the U.S. military and beyond. It shows that theories and practices of psychological resilience are not as novel as their proponents make them out to be. However, it also details how the ideal of a post-therapeutic, resilient subject became the cornerstone of a new, post-9/11 social imaginary. This article concludes that the contemporary ascendancy of psychological resilience indicates that rather than allying itself with the therapeutic as it had done previously, post-9/11 neoliberalism has moved toward the post-therapeutic.
KW - Gilles Deleuze
KW - Michel Foucault
KW - positive psychology
KW - post-therapeutic
KW - resilience training
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85063162973&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/0959354319830784
DO - 10.1177/0959354319830784
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AN - SCOPUS:85063162973
SN - 0959-3543
VL - 29
SP - 219
EP - 239
JO - Theory and Psychology
JF - Theory and Psychology
IS - 2
ER -