History and Psychoanalysis: The Genealogy of a Relationship

Volume XI|Issue 23| Jul 2025 |Translations

Abstract

​Historical knowledge necessitates an essential dialogue with psychoanalysis, whereby historical events transform into unconscious texts requiring critical deconstruction. This dialectical intersection extends beyond mere applications of "Freudian theory" to past events, advancing toward a fundamental reconceptualization of history itself as a therapeutic process that reveals the repressed traumas of collectivities and nations. Within this framework, psychoanalysis emerges as an analytical lens that exposes the hidden relationships between manifest structures and latent desires – mechanisms operating through projection, rationalization, and repression. Both historians and psychoanalysts pursue meaning through examining discursive gaps, epistemic displacements, and often more significantly, through analysing silence rather than speech. François Dosse's examination of this intricate relationship presents us with a central epistemological problem: How can historical inquiry maintain its claims to objectivity while being subject to the determinisms of the unconscious? Furthermore, to what extent can psychoanalysis provide a methodologically sound reading when addressing absent/present historical realities?

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