Daniel Burston has a Ph.D. in Social and Political Thought (1985) and another in Psychology (1989) from York University in Toronto. He is a Professor Emeritus in Psychology last Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, where he taught for 33 years. He is a historian of psychology, psychiatry and psychoanalysis, whose work focuses on the ways and places in which the mental health disciplines converge and overlap with religion, politics, philosophy and historical studies. His books include The Legacy of Erich Fromm (Harvard University Press, 1991), The Wing of Madness: The Life and Work of R.D.Laing (Harvard University Press, 1996), Erik Erikson and the American Psyche: Ego Ethics and Evolution (Aronson, 2007), A Forgotten Freudian: The Passion of Karl Stern (Karnac, 2016), Psychoanalysis, Politics and the Postmodern University (Palgrave MacMillen, 2020) and his latest Anti-Semitism and Analytical Psychology: Jung, Politics and Culture (Routledge, 2021). He is the co-editor (with Jon Mills) of Critical Theory and Psychoanalysis: From the Frankfurt School to Contemporary Critique (Routledge, 2023) and co-editor (with Kurt Jacobson) of Authoritarianism in All Its Guises: Right, Left and Center (Routledge, 2025.)
Remembering “The Sane Society”: An American Lament
In this talk he will revisit Fromm's pivotal book from 1955, the second year of President’s Eisenhower’s administration. The book had a profound impact on the ideas and agendas of social activists during the 60s and 70s, including this author. Its central theses were that the middle-class prosperity characteristic of that era masked a “pathology of normalcy”, and that capitalism transforms active citizens into passive consumers by compelling people to fill their material needs in ways that are at variance with their existential or human needs. The result is a dramatic diminution of their critical faculties, an atrophy of conscience, and the proliferation of a “marketing character”, a kind of alienated, hedonistic lifestyle whose emptiness is palliated by the consumption of ever larger quantities of consumer goods. Fromm’s analysis still rings true in some respects, but the middle-class prosperity and bland uniformity of opinion he critiqued began to wane in the late 1970s, gradually giving way to sharp extremes of poverty and wealth. The resulting political polarization has now reached a critical point, where the future of American democracy – or what little is left of it – is now in peril. So, as we approach 2025, Fromm’s analysis of America in the mid-20th century must be updated and modified to fit the contours of contemporary social realities. In so doing, however, we discover that American society is even more alienated, more atomized and fragile than it was in Fromm’s day.
When
April 16th, 2025 from 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM