Ordinary Unhappiness

138: Genocide and the Politics of Hospitality feat. Avgi Saketopoulou

33 snips
Mar 21, 2026
Avgi Saketopoulou, psychoanalyst and writer working on gender, race, and institutional politics. She discusses invitations turned into disinvitations and what those moves reveal about tolerance, exclusion, and institutional self-preservation. Conversations range across pathologizing affect, the weaponization of theory, naming genocide, and creating new spaces for psychoanalytic education.
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INSIGHT

Institutions Invite Dissidents For Energy Then Disinvite Them

  • Psychoanalytic institutions often invite dissident speakers to enliven themselves but disinvite when they cannot tolerate the ensuing dysregulation.
  • Avgi links invitations to a desire for unbinding energy and disinvitations to institutional self-preservation and anxiety about conflict.
ANECDOTE

Freud Museum Asked Avgi To Avoid A Kufiya Then Paused Her Talk

  • Avgi recounts being invited by the Freud Museum then put on pause after she insisted she would call the Gaza killings a genocide.
  • The museum asked her not to wear a kufiya and later offered to pivot to trans topics instead of addressing genocide.
INSIGHT

Splitting Is Used To Depoliticize Ethical Crises

  • Psychoanalysis habitually frames polarization as splitting to be repaired, using those concepts to depoliticize and defuse ethical conflicts.
  • Avgi argues this preserves a bland unity at the cost of addressing injustice like genocide or transphobia.
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