Psyche

Quique Autrey

A psychotherapist explores topics relating to psychotherapy, philosophy, culture, and religion.  

  1. Lacan, Corbin, & the Cloud of Resistance

    14H AGO

    Lacan, Corbin, & the Cloud of Resistance

    In this episode, I continue working through New Perspectives on Henry Corbin by focusing on Joan Copjec’s chapter on Corbin, Lacan, Kiarostami, and the Cloud. What surprised me most was seeing someone from the world of Lacanian theory take Corbin seriously — not as an odd mystical detour, but as a thinker who might help us rethink psychoanalysis, politics, cinema, and reality itself. Copjec brings Corbin’s Islamic neo-Gnosticism into conversation with Lacan’s Real and Kiarostami’s First Case, Second Case to explore what makes resistance possible when power wants everything visible, teachable, governable, and controlled. I reflect on Copjec’s idea of the Cloud as a hidden dimension inside reality, her distinction between nihilism and apophatic theology, and the radical political force of a God who cannot be possessed by the state, religion, ideology, or authority. This is not a politics of easy re-enchantment, but a politics of keeping the world open. I also talk about Copjec’s recently published book Cloud: Between Paris and Tehran, where she develops these themes further through Kiarostami, Corbin, and Lacan — a book I’m hoping to read soon. At the heart of this episode is a question that feels urgent right now: What happens to politics, therapy, religion, and the person when there is no longer any hidden remainder, no unborn dimension, no Cloud, no Real — nothing that escapes power? And what kind of listening might help us hear the unlocated sound that keeps the world from closing?

    31 min
  2. Holy Rationalizations

    MAY 12

    Holy Rationalizations

    In this episode, I veer away from Hegel for a moment to follow a curiosity that opened up after listening to the latest Why Theory discussion of After the Hunt. That conversation sent me back to John Howard Yoder, one of the most important theologians of Christian nonviolence in the twentieth century, and also someone who shaped the theological world I was formed in during seminary. But Yoder was not only a theologian of peace. He was also a man who sexually abused and exploited women, including women in his academic and religious orbit. And what makes his case so disturbing is not only the hypocrisy, as horrifying as that is, but the way he tried to turn his abuse into a theological experiment. Drawing from Isaac Villegas and Rachel Waltner Goossen’s work on Yoder’s abuse, I explore how Yoder used the language of Christian freedom, community, nonviolence, intimacy, and moral discernment to rationalize his behavior and avoid accountability. I also reflect on the psychoanalytic insight that we are often most dangerous when we find beautiful, moral, or spiritual language to explain away the harm we are causing. This episode is about abuse, power, self-deception, theology, institutions, and the need for a hermeneutic of suspicion toward our own noblest explanations. It asks what happens when the language of peace becomes a shelter for violence, when theology becomes an alibi, and when someone else’s suffering is finally allowed to interrupt the story we prefer to tell about ourselves.

    47 min
5
out of 5
16 Ratings

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A psychotherapist explores topics relating to psychotherapy, philosophy, culture, and religion.  

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