Abstract:
From a decolonial perspective, the aim of the research was to understand the places of black people in Psychoanalysis today. For this, 13 semi-structured interviews were carried out with black psychologists and psychoanalysts with clinical practice. From a categorical-thematic analysis, we identified four categories: choosing Psychoanalysis, articulating Psychoanalysis and racial relations, discovering oneself as black and the color of Psychoanalysis and of (non) psychoanalysts. Given the recognition of Psychoanalysis’s constraints, it was the lived experience of black people that was the engine of ontological displacement that enabled epistemic disobedience configured in the articulation of Psychoanalysis with social theories. This result highlights the intertwining of the coloniality of knowledge and being in the colonial matrix of power, emphasizing ontological disobedience as a fundamental path to anti-racist psychological practices.
Keywords:
Psychoanalysis; Coloniality; Race relations; Disobedience; Training