IN THE ABSENCE OF ASSURANCE
A series of essays exploring the collective shadow of a society that cannot bear to see itself clearly, and the emotional, relational, and moral disorientation that grows from that refusal.
ONE
The Collective Shadow
In this opening essay, we examine the idea of the collective shadow — the parts of a society’s reality that remain unacknowledged because they contradict the story it tells about itself. Blending Jungian psychology with sociological analysis, the essay traces how denial, projection, and moral splitting operate not just in individuals, but in entire cultures — and why telling the truth about collective behavior can feel so destabilizing.
TWO
Inside the Shadow
In the second essay, we examine the emotional and relational consequences of living inside a collective shadow. When reality is repeatedly softened, reframed, or denied, individuals are left carrying a quiet strain. Drawing on psychological and sociological perspectives, the essay traces how disorientation, grief, and social distance emerge when people refuse to look away — and why the pressure to preserve comfort can override the need for truth.
THREE
Shock
In the third essay, we examine how moments of visible injustice reveal the collective shadow at the level of society. Drawing on psychological and sociological perspectives, we explore how racialized exposure to unjust state power has long shaped daily life for some communities, while remaining outside the awareness of others. We trace how these denied realities become embodied, and how the absence of social acknowledgment leaves the burden of navigating them unevenly distributed.