
The Yale School of Medicine called her lecture “antithetical” to their values. Not because it is threatening, but because it exudes a pain and a paranoia I understand.įor whatever reason, some participants in our culture grimace at the word “cancel.” But that is also what they tried to do. On another listen, it is stone-cold serious. It is deliberately hyperbolic, seeming at times more fitting for the audience denied a space in the room (approximately two thirds of psychiatrists and Yale faculty identify as white).

How will they react with the respectability stripped away?

So now, she’s permitting the white folk who should be most familiar with the mind’s darkest recesses a glimpse into how dark they can actually get. Khilanani’s lecture is part performance art, part social experiment, reminiscent of the calling cards Adrian Piper delivered to white people at parties whenever they said something racist. But even when Black and Brown people express their rage “appropriately,” to people like friends or psychoanalysts, it is still met with white denial. Access to rage, she argues, is psychologically healthy. Khilanani’s lecture is part performance art, part social experiment, reminiscent of the calling cards Adrian Piper delivered to white people at parties whenever they said something racist (a work acquired by the Yale University Art Gallery in 2017). These stories all imitated the intonation of the original, released on Bari Weiss’s Substack, where Katie Herzog wrote underneath a “leaked” recording of the lecture that she thought it to be an “elaborate prank.” We are supposed to be shocked by this tropic story of a psychiatrist gone rogue-who, by confessing her fantasies of killing white people, is (can you believe?) no better than her criminal patients.

The rest of Khilanani’s lecture has now been immortalized in global headlines that all read as though written by the same person. Khilanani’s rough week was in reference to “the trial”-presumably Derek Chauvin’s. “They knew the topic, they knew the title, they knew the speaker,” Khilanani, who has studied English and race theory, would later tell The New York Times. On April 6, the Forensic Psychiatrist and Psychologist was invited by Yale to give a lecture. Aruna Khilanani began her lecture, somewhat prophetically.
