R. D. Hinshelwood is a fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society and a fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists. He worked in the National Health Service for over thirty years and then as professor at the University of Essex. In the 1970s, he worked at the Marlborough Day Hospital as it became a therapeutic community, and in the 1990s, he was director of the Cassel Hospital. He has written widely on Kleinian psychoanalysis and on the application of psychoanalysis to understanding organisational and social dynamics.
'Drawing on years of NHS work involving the development of therapeutic community treatment of mental illness, R. D. Hinshelwood has done a great job in providing with Unconscious Politics an emancipatory version of Marxism and psychoanalysis. In doing so, he applies to a wide variety of social phenomena the contrast between the baneful effects of self-alienating “dumping” projection of aspects of oneself onto others with the beneficial effects of interpersonal “sharing” and containment of what is projected.' -- Janet Sayers, emerita professor of psychoanalytic psychology, University of Kent, Canterbury; retired NHS clinical psychologist; author of Mothering Psychoanalysis and Freudian Tales 'R. D. Hinshelwood, one of the most influential and prolific writers in psychoanalysis today, brings his long-standing approach to individuals within their social context to provide a humble yet sophisticated psychoanalytic way to understand the close correlation between mental health issues and sociopolitical problems. In this rich, timely, and vitally important book, the role of the unconscious influences in social and political movements helps to answer why rationality and conscious psychology alone fail to explain the human psyche in the social domain. Most significantly, the author’s multifactorial psychosocial model offers possible psychoanalytic contributions to political action during today’s turbulent times.' -- Michael J. Diamond, PhD, training and supervising analyst, Los Angeles Institute and Society for Psychoanalytic Studies; author of Ruptures in the American Psyche: Containing Destructive Populism in Perilous Times 'With the expert clinician's sensitivity to the nuances of psychic experience within psychoanalytic concepts, R. D. Hinshelwood retains their integrity while adeptly applying them to pressing social and political realities. In so doing, he revitalises the Kleinian contribution to radical politics, alerting those seeking meaningful change to key unconscious dimensions of our collective struggles.' -- Luke Ali Manzarpour, The Red Clinic 'R. D. Hinshelwood’s Unconscious Politics is an enviable model of lucidity and insight as he sifts through Marxist and psychoanalytic traditions in order to integrate their most profound contributions and thereby illuminate the plights we are caught in today – and ways out. Anyone in the social sciences can benefit from reading this stellar explanation, and example, of applied dialectical reasoning.' -- Kurt Jacobsen, University of Chicago and co-editor of Free Associations Journal 'R. D. Hinshelwood’s book builds upon the exceptional ways of writing, thinking, and, most of all, teaching, that he has made his own. That is, he is widely known as an exceptional teacher of psychoanalysis and allied disciplines and, as you read this book, you almost immediately get a sense not so much that you a reading a book but that you are in a seminar with a brilliant teacher. A seminar that starts off with an examination of the fundamentals as regards the nature of what it is to be human, to have a mental life, and to engage with others, and then, from these foundations, brings us a panorama of our “psychosocial life”. Hinshelwood manages to achieve enormous breadth whilst never compromising on depth. He brings to his subject his vast scholarship of psychoanalysis, group psychology, and psychosocial processes, whilst all the time wedded to an exceptional philosophical understanding. Through this, he establishes a deep understanding of the relation of the mind to the social world around us, brought under the beam of these different perspectives. His approach is critical in the sense of always problematising and deeply probing that which is so often taken for granted. This book will have of enormous appeal to psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, sociologists, and political theorists. But it can also be immediately engaged with by those who have little knowledge of these disciplines; those seeking to deepen their understanding of the mind in its relation to the social, cultural, and political living that is at the core of our human life.' -- David Bell, consultant psychiatrist and past president of the British Psychoanalytical Society