In Lizaveta van Munsteren's The Vicissitudes of Psychoanalysis in Soviet Russia, 1930–1980, the author explores how Freudianism survived the repressive Stalinist era, characterized by the dismantling of intellectual openness.
Keeping Freudianism Alive
According to van Munsteren, appreciation for Freudian concepts was maintained through several key strategies:
* Split Languages: A growing divide between "official" and "informal" languages allowed intellectuals to use coded or specialized terminology to discuss prohibited subjects.
* Scientific Camouflage: Proponents of psychoanalytic thought integrated Freudian ideas into more "acceptable" scientific disciplines, such as psychophysiology and pathopsychology.
* Key Figures: Intellectuals like Alexander Luria, Bluma Zeigarnik, Filipp Bassin, and Dmitry Uznadze engaged in research on the unconscious and the role of language in mental formation, effectively acting as a "return of the repressed" for psychoanalysis.
* Interdisciplinary Engagement: By framing psychoanalytic questions within studies of the brain, mental disturbances, and the formation of the mind, these thinkers ensured that the core of the "talking cure" remained part of the Soviet scientific conversation.
Book Review: A Bridge for Modern Radical Thought
Lizaveta van Munsteren's The Vicissitudes of Psychoanalysis in Soviet Russia, 1930–1980 is a masterly reclamation of a "lost" intellectual heritage. For those today interested in the synthesis of Bolshevik Leninism and psychoanalysis, this book is indispensable. It meticulously demonstrates how early revolutionary fervor for human liberation through the mind survived Stalinist stagnation by retreating into "informal languages" and scientific sub-disciplines. Van Munsteren offers a nuanced recovery of figures like Luria and Zeigarnik, proving that even under extreme ideological pressure, the dialectical pursuit of understanding the unconscious remained a resilient, albeit underground, current of Soviet thought.
CHAPTER SUMMARIES
Introduction, Part 1 (1958), and Methodology
* Marxist-Freudian Synthesis: Early Soviet years saw a genuine attempt to combine Marxism and psychoanalysis to create a holistic science of the human being.
* The 1958 "Freud Session": This pivotal event served as the official condemnation of psychoanalysis, framing it as "ideological diversion" and "reactionary".
* Institutional Erasure: After the late 1920s, psychoanalysis lost its institutional standing, forcing its insights into other "sanctioned" disciplines.
* Scientific Camouflage: To survive, psychoanalytic concepts were rebranded using "Sovietized" terminology like "psychophysiology".
* Language as Subversion: Intellectuals used "informal language" to maintain analytical rigor while adhering to "official" Marxist-Leninist jargon.
* Historical Materialist Method: Van Munsteren uses a "socio-historical dimension" to read the history of Soviet psychology as a reflection of class and state struggle.
* Against Binaries: The book argues against the simple "East vs. West" or "Repression vs. Freedom" binary, seeking a dialectical understanding of Soviet intellectual life.
* The Archive as Battleground: Access to Soviet archives reveals that the "negation" of Freud was never absolute but a complex process of filtration.
* The "Schizophrenization" of Society: The state's attempt to force reality into ideological molds created a split between public performance and private belief.
* The Unconscious and the State: The suppression of the "unconscious" was an attempt by the state to maintain total control over the "conscious" Soviet subject.
Chapter 1: Histories and Discontents
* Lenin's Neutrality: Initially, leading Bolsheviks like Trotsky were open to Freud, while Lenin remained cautiously skeptical but not strictly prohibitory.
* Trotskyism and Freud: The association of psychoanalysis with Trotsky led to its eventual branding as a "counter-revolutionary" science.
* Aron Zalkind's Efforts: Zalkind attempted to create "Pedology," a Marxist science of child development that integrated Freud with social engineering.
* The Clinical Deficit: By the 1930s, clinical psychoanalysis (the "talking cure") was effectively banned as an individualist luxury.
* The "New Man" Project: Psychoanalysis was initially seen as a tool to help build the "New Soviet Man" by purging bourgeois neuroses.
* Pavlovian Hegemony: The state promoted Ivan Pavlov's reflexology as the "only" Marxist psychology because it was materialist and predictable.
* Negation as Incorporation: Even as the state "negated" Freud, it incorporated his findings into studies of labor productivity and trauma.
* Dialectical Materialism vs. Freud: Critics argued Freud was "idealist" because he focused on internal drives rather than social relations.
* The Linguistic Turn: The change in scientific language after 1930 wasn't just censorship; it was an attempt to redefine what it meant to be "human".
* Global Context: Soviet rejection of Freud was partly a reaction to the use of psychoanalysis in Western "capitalist" propaganda.
Chapter 2: Freud in Public Discourse
* Public Condemnation, Private Interest: While the press attacked "Freudianism," libraries and institutes continued to hold translations of Freud for "internal use".
* The Literaturnaia Gazeta Role: Popular journals often used attacks on Freud as a way to discuss prohibited topics like desire and the irrational.
* Freud as "Imperialist Tool": In the Cold War era, psychoanalysis was framed as a weapon used by the US to "psychologize" social problems.
* The Legitimacy Gap: There was a clear distinction between "vulgar Freudianism" (condemned) and "scientific psychology" (permitted).
* Biologism vs. Sociologism: Soviet critics claimed Freud ignored the biological basis of the brain, ironically favoring a hyper-materialist view.
* Literary Freud: Soviet literary critics often used Freudian concepts to analyze Western "decadent" literature, keeping the terms alive.
* The "Academic" Mask: Intellectuals published "critiques" of Freud that actually summarized his theories accurately for a hungry audience.
* Anti-Zionism: Later Soviet periods occasionally linked the "Jewish science" of psychoanalysis with anti-Zionist state campaigns.
* The Myth of the Blank Slate: The state insisted the Soviet mind was a "tabula rasa" shaped only by labor and society, denying the unconscious.
* Coded Resistance: Mentioning "unconscious processes" in a Pavlovian paper was a signal of support for Freudian thought.
Chapter 3: Zeigarnik, Luria, and Vygotsky
* Vygotsky's Dialectic: Lev Vygotsky sought a middle ground where social history and internal psychology met—a "historical materialism of the mind".
* Luria's "Romantic Science": Alexander Luria combined deep clinical case studies (reminiscent of Freud) with neurophysiology.
* The Zeigarnik Effect: Bluma Zeigarnik's work on "unfinished tasks" was rooted in Kurt Lewin's field theory but resonated with Freudian tension and release.
* Pathopsychology: This discipline was created to study the "abnormal" mind as a way to understand the "normal" Soviet subject.
* The Biological Turn: After 1948, psychology was forced to become "biological" to survive, leading to the "schizophrenization" of clinical practice.
* Luria's Psychoanalytic Past: Luria was a founding member of the Kazan Psychoanalytic Society, a fact he had to downplay for decades.
* Mediation and Tools: For Marxists, the most vital insight here is that the mind is "mediated" by cultural tools and social labor.
* Internalized Speech: The transition from external social speech to internal thought is a core Vygotskian-Marxist concept that mirrors the formation of the Ego.
* Defense of Clinical Richness: Zeigarnik fought to keep the patient's personal history central, against the state's preference for generic brain data.
* The Hidden Legacy: Much of what is now "Western" neuropsychology was actually pioneered by these "closet" Marxists/Freudians in the USSR.
Chapters 4 & 5: Luria's Turn and the Soviet Unconscious
* Psychophysiology of Labor: Luria's work on the brain was framed as optimizing the labor force, a "productivist" application of psychology.
* Language and Consciousness: Luria proved that higher mental functions are social in origin, a key Marxist tenet.
* Uznadze's Theory of Set: Dmitry Uznadze developed a theory of "unconscious readiness" (Set) to bypass the ban on the term "unconscious".
* Filipp Bassin's Return: Bassin was instrumental in the 1960s in "rehabilitating" the unconscious within a Marxist framework.
* The 1979 Tbilisi Symposium: A massive international event that signaled the return of the unconscious to Soviet scientific respectability.
* "Activity" Theory: Soviet thinkers replaced Freud's "Drive" with "Activity" (Deiatel'nost), focusing on what the subject does in the world.
* The Four-Volume Compendium: The publication of The Unconscious (1978-1985) remains one of the most significant Marxist-informed studies of the mind.
* Communication and Personality: The symposium linked the unconscious not just to sex, but to how people communicate under socialism.
* Philosophy of the Mind: Journals like Voprosy Filosofii debated whether the unconscious was "material" or "ideal," a core Marxist concern.
* The Lost Heritage: Van Munsteren concludes that modern Russia has "forgotten" this unique Soviet synthesis in favor of importing Western models.