×
Login Register an account
Top Submissions Explore Upgoat Search Random Subverse Random Post Colorize! Site Rules Donate
-3

Glowies are not going to like this thread

submitted by Joe_McCarthy to OccidentalEnclave 3 weeksApr 4, 2025 17:55:08 ago (+2/-5)     (OccidentalEnclave)

Incoming.


50 comments block

I ask the AI - how does Norman O. Brown critique the capitalist system

Norman O. Brown, through a psychoanalytic lens, critiques capitalism by arguing that it is a neurotic structure, a "corporate neurosis," stemming from the repression of true desires and the sublimation of erotic energy into the production of objects and political organizations that yield little pleasure.

Here's a more detailed explanation of Brown's critique:

Neurotic Structures:

Brown, drawing on Freudian ideas, views history and social structures, including capitalism, as neurotic formations.

Repression and Sublimation:

He argues that capitalism, like other cultural structures, emerges from the repression of true desires and the sublimation of erotic energy into the production of objects, character structures, and political organizations that yield little pleasure.

Anality and the "Protestant Ethic":

Brown analyzes the "Protestant ethic," often seen as a foundation for capitalism, through the lens of Freudian anality, arguing that it involves a repression of bodily desires and a focus on order and control.

"Corporate Neurosis":

Brown uses the term "corporate neurosis" to describe the way in which capitalist societies create a collective neurosis through the repression of true desires and the pursuit of material wealth and power.

The Value of Money:

Brown sees money as a "dehydrated filth that has been made to shine," arguing that the mediums of exchange in capitalist society are worthless from the perspective of use value.

Desublimation:

Brown advocates for a radical desublimation, a return to the wisdom of the polymorphously perverse body, a rejection of goal-oriented culture in favor of living in the moment, and an acceptance of death as part of life.