Wilhelm Reich versus the Flying Saucers: An American Tragedy

dc.contributor.authorReich, James
dc.date.accessioned2024-07-08T08:14:49Z
dc.date.available2024-07-08T08:14:49Z
dc.date.issued2024-06-27
dc.date.updated2024-07-08T08:14:48Z
dc.descriptionPublication status: ACTIVE
dc.description.abstractThe convenient myth of Wilhelm Reich is that he “lost his mind” in the early 1950s, if not before, and that the last seven years of his life and work — the orgone and radiation experiments, the cloudbuster, and flying saucer intrigues — present an embarrassment. Even the counterculture that embraced Reich, not least William S. Burroughs, Norman Mailer, and filmmaker Dušan Makavejev, tended to distort his theory. The psychosis attached to Reich by his detractors was the culmination of decades of scapegoating by psychoanalysts, Nazis, communists, and conservatives. But Reich’s environmental and Cold War preoccupations and his slow-burning fascination with UFO phenomena were not signs of a madness incipient since his break with Sigmund Freud. They anticipated and reflected much in the American psyche. Defining the presence of a “cinematic self” in the misunderstood analyst once considered an heir to Freud, Wilhelm Reich versus the Flying Saucers rejects orthodox portrayals of Reich’s final years as merely pathological. Combining original analysis and evidence from the Wilhelm Reich Archive, James Reich uncovers the fatal moments in the psychologist’s uncanny identification with the “spaceman,” and the myth of a scientist lost to his own grandiosity and paranoia. Taking seriously the influence of The Day the Earth Stood Still, Bad Day at Black Rock, and other pop cultural narratives on Reich, this “psychoanalytic detective story” concerns existential traps, conscious and unconscious collaborations and betrayals by disciples, and unidentified flying object-relations. Reich’s is an atomic-age passion narrative. Vitally, Reich’s story could be ours. The author is not related to his subject.
dc.description.versionVoR
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.53288/0452.1.00
dc.identifier.isbn9781685711849
dc.identifier.isbn9781685711856
dc.identifier.othere8d8f5d7-3348-4f25-8716-5807c0350899
dc.identifier.urihttps://thoth-arch.lib.cam.ac.uk/handle/1811/719
dc.languageENG
dc.publisherpunctum books
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
dc.subjectOCC025000
dc.subjectPSY026000
dc.subjectJBCC
dc.subjectJMAF
dc.subjectVXQB
dc.subjectcloudbusting
dc.subjectintrojection
dc.subjectorgone
dc.subjectorgonomy
dc.subjectpsychoanalysis
dc.subjectUFO
dc.subjectWilhelm Reich
dc.titleWilhelm Reich versus the Flying Saucers: An American Tragedy
dc.typehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2f33
dcterms.accessRightsEmbargo: none

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