Psychoanalytical and Freudian psychology Books

3771 products


  • Psychoanalytic Thinking in Occupational Therapy

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Psychoanalytic Thinking in Occupational Therapy

    Book SynopsisThis book is the first to use psychoanalysis as a basis for exploring how occupational therapists do their work, and it incorporates a new conceptual model to guide practice. The authors emphasize the role of the unconscious in all that people do and are, and argue that activities (or occupations) are simultaneously real (i.e.Trade Review"This is a valuable book in stimulating our thinking around psychoanalytic theory and how this can be embraced into occupational therapy practice. It provides many references to seminal materials and the reader should explore these for a greater breadth of understanding." (British Journal of Occupational Therapy, 1 April 2014)Table of ContentsForeword by Sheena Blair vii Foreword by Paul Hoggett ix Acknowledgements xi 1 Introduction 1 Section 1 Psychoanalytic Theory Interwoven with Occupational Therapy 13 2 The ‘Therapeutic Use of Self’ in Occupational Therapy 15 3 An Occupational Therapy Perspective on Freud, Klein and Bion 32 4 The Function of ‘Doing’ in the Intermediate Space: Donald Winnicott and Occupational Therapy 57 5 Beyond Bowlby: Exploring the Dynamics of Attachment 68 6 Re-awakening Psychoanalytic Thinking in Occupational Therapy: From Gail Fidler to Here 87 Section 2 Psychoanalytic Occupational Therapy: A Relational Practice Model and Illuminating Theory in Clinical Practice 103 7 MOVI: A Relational Model in Occupational Therapy 105 8 Let the Children Speak 128 9 Working with Difference 145 Section 3 Further Psychoanalytic Thinking: Research and Training 163 10 Psychoanalytic Thinking in Research 165 11 Understanding the Use of Emotional Content in Therapy Using Occupational Therapists’ Narratives 186 12 Training Experiences to Develop Psychoanalytic Thinking 202 13 The Relational Space of Supervision 222 Index 239

    £39.85

  • Sex between Body and Mind

    LUP - University of Michigan Press Sex between Body and Mind

    Book SynopsisIn the first half of the 20th century the German-speaking world became the international centre of medical-scientific sex research - and the birthplace of sexology and psychoanalysis. This is the first book to closely examine encounters among this era's German-speaking researchers across their emerging professional and disciplinary boundaries.

    £73.10

  • The Foundations of Psychoanalysis

    University of California Press The Foundations of Psychoanalysis

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisPresents a philosophical critique of the foundations of Sigmund Freud's psychoanalysis. This book takes cognizance of his claim that psychoanalysis has the credentials of a natural science.Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: Critique of the Hermeneutic Conception of Psychoanalytic Theory and Therapy Chapter 1. The Exegetical Legend of "Scientistic Self-Misunderstanding" Chapter 2. Critique of Habermas's Philosophy of Psychoanalysis A. Does the Dynamics of Psychoanalytic Therapy Exhibit the "Causality of Fate"? B. Are Nomological Explanations in the Natural Sciences Generically Non-Historical, While Causal Accounts in Psychoanalysis are Historically-Contextual? C. Does the Patient Have Privileged Cognitive Access to the Validation or Discreditation of Psychoanalytic Hypotheses? Chapter 3. Critique of Ricoeur's Philosophy of Psychoanalysis A. Ricoeur's Truncation of the Purview of Freudian Theory B. Are Natural Science Modes of Explanation and Validation Gainsaid in Psychoanalysis By the Pathogenicity of Seduction Fantasies, Or By the Explanatory Role of "Meaning"? C. Does the Theory of Repression Furnish a "Semantics of Desire"? D. Ricoeur's Disposal of "The Question of Proof in Freud's Theory" Chapter 4. Are Repressed Motives Reasons But Not Causes of Human Thought and Conduct? Chapter 5. Critique of GeorgeS. Klein's Version of Hermeneutic Psychoanalysis Chapter 6. The Collapse of the Scientophobic Reconstruction of Freud's Theory Part I. The Clinical Method of Psychoanalytic Investigation: Pathfinder or Pitfall? Chapter 1. Is Freud's Theory Empirically Testable? A. Clinical versus Experimental Testability:Statement of the Controversy B. The Purported Untestability of the Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality Chapter 2. Did Freud Vindicate His Method of Clinical Investigation? A. Are Clinical Confirmations an Artifact of the Patient's Positive "Transference" Feelings Toward the Analyst? B. Freud's Reliance on the Hypothesized Dynamics of Therapy as a Vindication of his Theory of Unconscious Motivation C. Was Freud's Attempted Therapeutic Vindication of the Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality Successful? Part II. The Cornerstone of the Psychoanalytic Edifice: Is the Freudian Theory of Repression Well Founded? Chapter 3. Appraisal of Freud's Arguments for the Repression Etiology of the Psychoneuroses Chapter 4. Examination of the Psychoanalytic Theory of Slips-of Memory, the Tongue, Ear, and Pen Chapter 5. Repressed Infantile Wishes as Instigators of All Dreams: Critical Scrutiny of the Compromise Model of Manifest Dream Content Chapter 6. Appraisal of Freud's Further Arguments for the Emergence of Unadulterated Repressions Under "Free" Association Chapter 7. Remarks on Post-Freudian Defenses of the Fundamental Tenets of Psychoanalysis Chapter 8. Can the Repression Etiology of Psychoneurosis Be Tested Retrospectively? Part III. Epilogue Chapter 9. The Method of Free Association and the Future Appraisal of Psychoanalysis Chapter 10. Critique of Freud's Final Defense of the Probative Value of Data from the Couch: The Pseudo-Convergence of Clinical Findings Chapter 11. Coda on Exegetical Myth-Making in Karl Popper's Indictment of the Clinical Validation of Psychoanalysis Bibliography Indexes Name Index Subject Index

    1 in stock

    £26.10

  • Female Subjects in Black and White

    University of California Press Female Subjects in Black and White

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA collaboration between African American and white feminists that deals with the problems that have troubled feminist thinking for decades. It questions such issues as the primacy of sexual difference, the universal nature of psychoanalytic categories, and the role of race in the formation of identity.Table of ContentsCONTRIBUTORS: Elizabeth Abel Katherine Clay Bassard Judith Butler Barbara Christian Ann duCille Mae G. Henderson Margaret Homans Akasha (Gloria) Hull Barbara Johnson Tania Modleski Helene Moglen Cynthia D. Schrager Carolyn Martin Shaw Hortense J. Spillers Jean Walton Laura Wexler

    1 in stock

    £27.90

  • The Social Edges of Psychoanalysis

    University of California Press The Social Edges of Psychoanalysis

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis text collects together the author's essays on psychoanalytic concepts. Psychoanalytic theory has had an ambivalent relationship with sociology, and these essays explore that ambivalence, providing arguments about how and why psychoanalytic approaches can deepen the sociological perspective.

    1 in stock

    £45.05

  • Berlin Psychoanalytic

    University of California Press Berlin Psychoanalytic

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTaking us from World War I Berlin to the Third Reich and beyond to 1940s Palestine and 1950s New York - and to the influential work of the Frankfurt School - this book traces the network of artists and psychoanalysts that began in Germany and continued in exile.Trade Review"Brilliant, fascinating, and exciting... Essential." Choice "Sobering and instructive... Fuechnter's book brings revolutionary figures back into discourse." Times Literary Supplement (TLS) "Essential reading for all those who seek to understand a crucial group in the history of modernism." Alpata: A Journal Of History "[Fuechtner] is an erudite guide through part of that weird and wonderful world." Metapsychology Online Review

    1 in stock

    £56.80

  • Feminism and Psychoanalysis

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Feminism and Psychoanalysis

    Book SynopsisFeminism and Psychoanalysis: A Critical Dictionary is of major interest to those who are aware of the breadth of its two component areas, and wish to explore the common ground between them more intensively. Entries deal with concepts from and significant figures in psychoanalysis, issues of sexual politics that intersect with psychoanalysis, feminist aesthetics and criticism which both use and challenge psychoanalytic thought. Each entry concludes with a short, carefully selected list of further reading.Trade Review"Not only a work of reference, but an indispensable guide to the territory of feminist argument." Parveen Adams, Brunel University "The entries are written by many of the best writers in the field; the bibliographies are invaluable ... Does an excellent job naming and covering the variety of issues at stake." Jane Gallop, University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee "Impeccably researched, as well as lucidly written." Madelon Sprengnether, University of Minnesota "This Dictionary will be an essential resource for anyone undertaking research in the area of 'feminism and psychoanalysis'." Morag Shiach, British Journal of PsychotherapyTable of ContentsIntroduction. Dictionary Entries A-Z. Index.

    £38.90

  • The Zizek Reader

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Zizek Reader

    Book SynopsisZizek's work is a mix of Hegel and Hitchcock, Schelling and science fiction, Kant and courtly love, Stalin and Stephen King, all of which is strongly seasoned with Lacanian psychoanalysis. This title includes a Preface by Zizek and an essay on cyberspace. It includes Culture, Woman and Philosophy.Trade Review"Zizek is, in fact, the most formidably brilliant exponent of psychoanalysis, indeed of cultural theory in general, to have emerged in Europe for some decades." Terry Eagleton, University of Oxford "The Zizek Reader is an excellent introduction to his thinking and contains the first systematic criticism of his work, in editorial introductions to each essay. In his own preface, Zizek makes his gambit explicit by his categorical rejection of the 'hegemonic trends' of today's academia." The IndependentTable of ContentsPreface: Burning the Bridges by Slavoj Zizek vii Acknowledgements xi Introduction 1 Part I: Culture 9 1. The Undergrowth of Enjoyment: How popular culture can serve as an Introduction to Lacan 11 2. The Obscene Object of Postmodernity 37 3. The Spectre of Ideology 53 4. Fantasy as a Political Category: A Lacanian Approach 87 5. Is it Possible to Traverse the Fantasy in Cyberspace?102 Part II: Woman 125 6. Otto Weininger, or 'Woman doesn't Exist' 127 7. Courtly Love, or Woman as Thing 148 8. There is No Sexual Relationship 174 9. Death and the Maiden 206 Part III: Philosophy 223 10. Hegel's 'Logic of Essence' as a Theory of Ideology 225 11. Schelling-in-Itself: The Orgasm of Forces 251 12. A Hair of the Dog that Bit You 268 13. Kant with (or against) Sade 283 14. Of Cells and Selves 302 Slavoj Žižek: Bibliography of Worlds in English 321 Index 323

    £39.85

  • Hermes Dilemma and Hamlets Desire

    Harvard University Press Hermes Dilemma and Hamlets Desire

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn essays that question how the human sciences, particularly anthropology and psychoanalysis, articulate their fields of study, Crapanzano addresses nothing less than the enormous problem of defining the self in both its individual and collective projections.Trade ReviewEnormously learned, quite brilliant in its details, and magisterial in its theoretical purpose. -- Hayden WhiteThe argument of the book is both subtle and telling, lodged between Hermes’ dilemma of a message he cannot deliver without co-opting and Hamlet’s predicament of a language from which one cannot ‘steal.’ -- Roy Wagner, University of VirginiaTable of ContentsIntroduction PART 1: THE TEXTUALIZED SELF 1. Centering 2. Hermes' Dilemma 3. The Self, the Third, and Desire 4. Self-Characterization PART 2: THE DIALOGIC SELF 5. Text, Transference, and Indexicality 6. Talking (about) Psychoanalysis 7. Mohammed and Dawia 8. Dialogue PART 3: THE EXPERIENCED SELF 9. Symbols and Symbolizing 10. Glossing Emotions 11. Saints, Jnun, and Dreams 12. Rite of Return PART 4: THE SUBMERGED SELF 13. Maimed Rites and Wild and Whirling Words Notes References Index

    1 in stock

    £37.36

  • A Case for Irony

    Harvard University Press A Case for Irony

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewBefore we can claim to live a truly examined life, says Jonathan Lear, we need to pass the test of ironic self-scrutiny at something approaching the level set by Socrates and Kierkegaard. Following the contours of the subtle case for radical irony Lear makes turns out to be an intellectual adventure in its own right. -- J. M. CoetzeeJonathan Lear's re-reading of the significance of irony for getting the hang of a genuinely human existence is an unheimlich maneuver that brings religion and psychoanalysis into productive conversation with philosophy, and induces characteristically sharp and creative responses from his interlocutors: an exemplary instance of the virtues of the Tanner Lectures format. -- Stephen Mulhall, University of OxfordLear performs a valuable service. He shows us just how far the contemporary usage of irony diverges from an older, far more appealing meaning, according to which irony is a portal to self-knowledge. -- Andrew Stark * Wall Street Journal *Lear's book provides intellectual pleasure of a very high order: its distinctions are careful, its prose lucid and elegant, and its examples suggestive and well chosen...You should read this book. -- Paul J. Griffiths * Commonweal *

    £23.36

  • Dispatches from the Freud Wars

    Harvard University Press Dispatches from the Freud Wars

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe noted historian and philosopher of science John Forrester raises a provocative point: no matter how you feel about Freud, you can't escape the influence of his theories. Through questions central to our century's ways of thinking, Forrester explores dreams, history, ethics, political theory, and psychoanalysis as a scientific movement.Trade ReviewWhere Forrester hits the mark is his insight on the passionate intensity of the battles between Freud and his critics, and the analogy he makes between this struggle and the one between analyst and his or her patient. It may be possible, in fact, to read the entire commentary on Freud as that between analysand and analyst, all projecting part of their shadow onto Freud and struggling in the trenches of transference and countertransference. It is to Forrester's credit that he sees this and shows it to us in this provocative book. -- Claire Douglas * Washington Post Book World *[This book, along with Truth Games]…present[s] a series of eight wide-ranging but interconnected essays. Taken as an ensemble, they deal with the history of psychoanalysis, redefinitions of psychoanalysis and what it means to be a Freudian, psychoanalytic readings of contemporary cultural issues, discussions of the scientific status of psychoanalysis and an impassioned defence of psychoanalysis…The essays are elegantly written, and open up a number of new perspectives on these issues, as well as putting forward new formulations of more familiar ones…Anyone interested in the history of psychoanalysis and the cultural location of psychoanalysis today is likely to find these essays stimulating, engaging and inviting of dialogue. -- Sonu Shamdasani * Medical History *Dispatches from the Freud Wars is compulsively readable, a revision of Freud's life and thought, brilliantly written, full of enticing detail. -- A.S. Byatt * The Sunday Times *An expert at the shifting sands of philosophical argument, Forrester continually undercuts the grounds of the varieties of criticisms aimed at psychoanalytic theory, technique and cultural significance. Love him or hate him, Forrester rightly insists, we cannot pretend that Freud did not exist, and that his extensive writings have not permanently influenced the 20th century's received views on human nature, hermeneutics and the nature of scientific inquiry...To a large extent then, this a book about reading Freud, rhetorically structured so that the final charges of misreading leveled against such critics of psychoanalysis as Frederick Crews and Adolph Grünbaum ring convincing and true. Forrester's accomplishment here is to deflect the accusations of psychoanalysis as pseudo-science back onto the accusers, who do not understand that psychoanalysis is not, and never was intended to be, rocket science. -- Renée Kingcaid * Psychoanalytic Studies *Freud could hardly have a doughtier champion. Forrester's writerly and polemical skills are impressive, and make for an utterly fascinating book. -- A. C. Grayling * Financial Times *John Forrester is well known for his translations of Lacan and for his books on psychoanalysis. This excellent collection of essays is elegantly readable. The title essay presents a measured, reasonable defense of Freud which neither conceals his flaws nor blackens his character. -- Anthony Storr * The Times *Forrester, interestingly, uses Freud's thinking to reconsider such subjects as the links between envy and justice, and the nature of discretion as opposed to transgression...[His] book is consistently challenging. -- Paul Roazen * Globe & Mail *Here there are excellent essays on Freud's lurid relationship with Sandor Ferenczi, and on Freud the collector of antiquities. -- Justin Wintle * The Independent *Although there were many reasons for thinking that the complacencies of the American psychoanalytic establishment deserved a thorough shaking-up, it is disconcerting that an impression may be now abroad that psychoanalysis deserved to be seen as junk science. On this score Forrester is, in my opinion, on the side of the angels. He takes Freud seriously as a figure within intellectual history, and in the last chapter of this book Forrester tries to deal with criticisms...Forrester rightly sees Freud as part of the Western moral thought, a thinker whose ethical practices and preachings deserve close scrutiny. -- Paul Roazen * Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences *[These] six long, probing essays on Freudian psychoanalysis and its cultural legacy...stand in welcome contrast to some of the recent facile debunkings of Freudianism. Forrester...writes on topics ranging from justice and envy to the deeper meaning of the sculptures and other objects from classical antiquity that Freud collected. He is particularly adept at making cross-cultural and interdisciplinary links...The great merit of Forrester's book is that it takes both Freud and his critics seriously. The author is both rigorous about classical psychoanalysis's limitations and deeply respectful of its enormous contributions to our culture and specifically our understanding of the self. He has made a profound, sometimes scintillating, contribution to the history of this most multifaceted science and craft. * Kirkus Reviews *John Forrester's Dispatches from the Freud Wars is also compulsively readable, a revision of Freud's life and thought, brilliantly written, full of enticing detail. -- A.S. Byatt * Sunday Times *John Forrester's Dispatches from the Freud Wars is a fascinating discussion of why Freud, unlike Marx--at the moment--won't leave us alone and how much of our thinking is impossible without his ideas. Freud's most vehement critics prove repeatedly that ours is his century. -- Hanif Kureishi * The Observer *Refreshingly, John Forrester wagers 'that the more we know about Freud--the more one has unlearned what one was hardwired to know about him--the more interesting and surprising and thought-provoking he becomes.' Your Freudian education could begin here. * The Guardian *In his stimulating analysis, the author brings to bear an impressive array of thinkers: St. Augustine, Nietzsche, Lacan, Ferenczi, Rawls, Crews, Sulloway, and Derrida, among many others. The scope, clarity, and constrained passion of the present study place it among the outstanding works on the subject for scholars and serious lay readers. * Library Journal *Forrester's essays are scholarly, engagingly presented, original and often humorous. His style, which becomes characteristic essay to essay, is to present an anecdote, a quotation, an observation, and then to develop it outwards, in concentric circles of meaning, which become richer and more complex as they proceed. -- Bernard M. Edelstein, M.D., Beth Israel Hospital, Harvard Medical SchoolForrester is already well known as the author of Language and the Origins of Psychoanalysis (1980) and The Seductions of Psychoanalysis (1990), as the co-author of Freud's Women (1992), and as the translator and editor of key volumes from Lacan's Seminar. This latest collection of essays finds Forrester in top form. It extends and diversifies his earlier writings in important ways and brings him to the forefront of contemporary debates on the standing of psychoanalysis. It is of course easy to talk about the Freudian inheritance nowadays--being able to do so is one of the entry requirements to the smart set and to an entire spectrum of academic and semipopular journals. Forrester's voice rises clear of this metropolitan hubbub: he is an outstanding Freud scholar who brings a scrupulous sense of history to everything he does. Dispatches from the Freud Wars is likely to command a very wide readership and to be massively influential in the current psychoanalytic debate. -- Malcolm Bowie, University of OxfordJohn Forrester...has seen that the reactions to Freud are themselves an interesting commentary on our culture as a whole. His latest book consists of six essays on Freud and his effects, focusing on the various kinds of reactions to and interpretations of him. While by no means an unqualified admirer, he assumes that Freud is a supremely important figure in the twentieth-century's attempt to understand itself...I enjoyed this book; it is written in a vigorous, discursive style, provocative and illuminating...It is nice to be reminded by this book that psychoanalytic ideas exist in a wider zeitgeist, and are there not just to be worked with, but also to be played with. -- Susan Budd * International Journal of Psycho-Analysis *This volume delves into the heart of the current Freud debates. As an erudite scholar from the department of History and Philosophy of Science at Cambridge University, Forrester brings impeccable credentials to his exegesis. -- George Hough, Ph.D * Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic *For the lay reader Dispatches from the Freud Wars is not an easy read, but it is one bound to leave us rethinking the most pervasive and commonplace aspects of our daily lives and surrounding communities. John Forrester's breadth of knowledge is admirable--astonishing, really. And he does succeed in realigning our vision, clarifying an epoch by confronting us with perspectives that shift from dazzlingly wide to uncomfortably narrow...Taken together, the essays comprise a multi-faceted approach to Freud, a man not to be approached in any simple or narrow manner, as Forrester makes abundantly clear. -- Elizabeth Templeman * Southern Humanities Review *Table of ContentsIntroduction Justice, Envy, and Psychoanalysis Casualities of Truth Collector, Naturalist, Surrealist Dream Readers "A Whole Climate of Opinion" Dispatches from the Freud Wars Epilogue Abbreviations Notes Acknowledgments Index

    1 in stock

    £29.66

  • Freud

    Harvard University Press Freud

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisÉlisabeth Roudinesco's bold reinterpretation of Sigmund Freud is a biography for the twenty-first centurya sympathetic yet impartial appraisal of a genius admired but misunderstood in his time and ours. Alert to tensions in his character and thought, she views Freud less as a scientific thinker than as an interpreter of civilization and culture.Trade ReviewDo we think we know all there is to know about Freud? Not even close. Élisabeth Roudinesco’s book is full of fresh facts about Freud’s life and potent interpretation of his work. A sparkling and highly original intellectual biography. -- Mark Edmundson, author of The Death of Sigmund Freud: The Legacy of His Last DaysThrough seamlessly and eloquently weaving together details from Freud’s time and our own, [Roudinesco] provides a refreshingly new and welcome account—warts and all. -- Janet Sayers * Times Higher Education *[Roudinesco] provides an insightful, balanced, and sympathetic portrait of Freud. As she assesses Freud’s revolutionary ideas about rationality, sexuality, and the unconscious, Roudinesco demonstrates that Freud was less a scientific thinker who uncovered universal truths than a product of his time: a genius, to be sure, but very much a bourgeois shaped by society, family, and politics in the late 19th century…Her critique has an especially persuasive force because it is grounded not only in an analysis of Freud’s books, diaries, and letters but from accounts of his sessions with patients. -- Glenn C. Altschuler * Psychology Today *What makes Freud: In His Time And Ours…such a captivating read, is the author’s ability to explain what are often complex, deeply-layered, and dark taboo subjects, into a language that is easily understood…[A] brilliant biography. -- J. P. O’Mallery * Irish Examiner *Élisabeth Roudinesco’s new biography, Freud: In His Time and Ours, is a welcome reminder of Freud’s considerable influence on 20th-century intellectual life. More important, she puts center stage Freud’s complex brand of rationalism and the full scope of his achievements, which went far beyond offering a cure for individuals. In particular, Roudinesco captures Freud’s recognition of the insurmountable ways in which our irrational desires and longings shape who we are and how we act. This correction is needed not only to give us a more accurate sense of Freud’s innovations, but also to contrast it against today’s more complacent assumptions about human rationality. Despite what economists and psychologists and political scientists insist, the rational self is not always master in its own house—whether in individual life or in collective experience…Roudinesco recounts Freud’s life and the development of his thought with great flair. -- Samuel Moyn * The Nation *Freud, a pioneer in creative biography, meets his analyst, a woman who illuminates modern psychology and social evolution for general audiences. This is perhaps the most important Freud biography since that of Jones, and a welcome corrective. -- E. James Lieberman * Library Journal (starred review) *A new standard…[A] masterful achievement…It has the…tangible mix of insouciance, scholarly thoroughness and psychoanalytic acumen, and it demonstrates Roudinesco’s critical and philosophical talent. The book’s strength is not so much in providing new material, although it does supply intriguing details about Freud’s patients and his relationships with family, friends, opponents and disciples. Rather, Roudinesco offers us a rereading of Freud that makes sense of him in relation to his emergence in the Jewish Vienna of the second half of the 19th century, and to the ‘old Europe’ to which he was so attached until it crumbled in the 20th. -- Stephen Frosh * Jewish Chronicle *[A] compelling biography…Forget the science: Roudinesco presents a brilliant cultural commentator, a man who married Romanticism and science in a way attractive to the belle époque. In fact, the biographer anchors Freud to his time and place in a way he himself—for all his focus on ‘civilization and its discontents’—never managed. -- Brian Bethune * Maclean’s *This is a book which eschews simple answers and is thus a significant milestone in our understanding of Freud… Roudinesco’s work is both comprehensive and subtle… In reclaiming [Freud] as ‘the master interpreter of civilization and culture,’ she has provided an invaluable service. -- Stuart Kelly * Scotland on Sunday *A revealing portrait of a cultural revolutionary. -- Bryce Christensen * Booklist (starred review) *A balanced account of one of the most exceptional and daring thinkers and writers to emerge in the modernist era. -- J.P. O’Malley * Irish Times *

    10 in stock

    £32.36

  • The Rhetorical Voice of Psychoanalysis

    Harvard University Press The Rhetorical Voice of Psychoanalysis

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisDiscusses the idea that psychoanalysis is no closer to being a science now than when Freud first invented the discipline. By challenging the traditions and diminishing the power of rhetoric, this text aims to show how psychoanalysis can remain a creative enterprise with a scientific base.Trade ReviewSpence argues that Freud used powerful rhetorical devices to persuade his potential followers that his ideas were correct… The result has been (1) rigidity of theory—because much of theory is metaphor that can be neither proven nor disproven; and (2) limitation of discourse in psychoanalytic literature—because the central metaphors have attained the status of ‘truth’ that is no longer questioned scientifically. Spence makes his point effectively and thoughtfully. -- Richard Almond * Psychoanalytic Quarterly *

    2 in stock

    £37.36

  • A Psychology of Difference

    Princeton University Press A Psychology of Difference

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA leading disciple and confidant of Freud, Otto Rank revolutionized the field of psychoanalytic theory in "The Trauma of Birth" (1924). This collection of lectures constitutes a "readable Rank," filled with insights suitable for those interested in the humanistic, existential, or object- relational aspects of psychotherapy.Trade Review"Dr. Kramer ... is fast becoming one of the most productive and consistently insightful rnak scholars on the scene today. His major Rankian essays include treatments of Rank's place in the history of psychoanalysis, specific aspects of Rankian theory, Rank's influence on later major figures such as Carl Rogers, and the application of Rank's ideas to management theory."--The Ernest Becker FoundationTable of ContentsForewordChronology of Rank's Life (1884-1939)Editor's Notes to the ReaderIntroduction. Insight and Blindness: Visions of Rank3Pt. 1The Trauma of Birth: "A Much Stronger Repression Than Even Infantile Sexuality"1Psychoanalysis as General Psychology (1924)512The Therapeutic Application of Psychoanalysis (1924)663The Trauma of Birth and Its Importance for Psychoanalytic Therapy (1924)784Psychoanalysis as a Cultural Factor (1924)85Pt. 2Exploring the Dark Continent of Maternal Power: "The 'Bad Mother' Freud Has Never Seen"5Foundations of a Genetic Psychology (1926)996Development of the Ego (1926)1077The Problem of the Etiology of the Neurosis (1926)1128The Anxiety Problem (1926)1169The Genesis of the Guilt-Feeling (1926)13110The Genesis of the Object Relation (1926)140Pt. 3From Projection and Identification to Self-Determination: "Emotions Are the Center and Real Sphere of Psychology"11Love, Guilt, and the Denial of Feelings (1927)15312Emotional Suffering and Therapy (1927)16613The Significance of the Love Life (1927)17714Social Adaptation and Creativity (1927)18915The Prometheus Complex (1927)20116Parental Attitudes and the Child's Reactions (1927)211Pt. 4Toward a Theory of Relationship and Relativity: "I Am No Longer Trying to Prove Freud was Wrong and I Right"17Speech at First International Congress on Mental Hygiene (1930)22118Beyond Psychoanalysis (1928)22819The Yale Lecture (1929)24020Neurosis as a Failure in Creativity (1935)25121Active and Passive Therapy (1935)26022Modern Psychology and Social Change (1938)264Prior Publication of Lectures277References279Index285

    1 in stock

    £103.50

  • Freud the Reluctant Philosopher

    Princeton University Press Freud the Reluctant Philosopher

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisFreud began university intending to study both medicine and philosophy. But he was ambivalent about philosophy, regarding it as metaphysical, too limited to the conscious mind, and ignorant of empirical knowledge. Yet his private correspondence and his writings on culture and history reveal that he never forsook his original philosophical ambitions. Indeed, while Freud remained firmly committed to positivist ideals, his thought was permeated with other aspects of German philosophy. Placed in dialogue with his intellectual contemporaries, Freud appears as a reluctant philosopher who failed to recognize his own metaphysical commitments, thereby crippling the defense of his theory and misrepresenting his true achievement. Recasting Freud as an inspired humanist and reconceiving psychoanalysis as a form of moral inquiry, Alfred Tauber argues that Freudianism still offers a rich approach to self-inquiry, one that reaffirms the enduring task of philosophy and many of the abiding ethical vTrade Review"Tauber's patient exposition of Freud's suppressed philosophical heritage becomes a tour de force when he turns back beyond Schopenhauer to Kant."--Lesley Chamberlain, New Statesman "The main focus is Freud as an ethical and social thinker who, while drawing on multiple sources of classical humanism, prepares the way for a new humanism informed by the insights of psychoanalysis. Tauber offers important chapters devoted to the intellectual ferment of 19th-century German philosophy and its influence on Freud."--Choice "Tauber provides a scholarly exposition, and the book is helpful for appreciating the diverse background influences on Freud's thinking. Furthermore, Tauber also clearly has an exhaustive knowledge of Freud's writing and is well read with respect to contemporary philosophically oriented psychoanalytic writers."--Simon Boag, PsycCRITIQUES "I feel a great deal of sympathy towards Tauber's project, and his analysis is rich, interesting and engaged."--Johan Eriksson, Scandinavian Psychoanalytic Review "[A] tour de force."--Elisabeth Young-Breuhl, Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association "This is an attractively written and deeply illuminating study of Freud as moral philosopher... This book goes a long way to explain the positive side of the continued interest and, indeed, to explain why Freud will continue to fascinate, leaving far behind by-now stale debate about whether or not he created a science."--Roger Smith, British Journal for the History of Science "Freud, the Reluctant Philosopher is an erudite, thoughtful and challenging book, which amply repays the investment of working through it."--Daphna Erdinast-Vulcan, European LegacyTable of ContentsPreface xi Acknowledgments xix Introduction: Psychoanalysis as Philosophy 1 Chapter One: The Challenge (and Stigma) of Philosophy 24 Chapter Two: Distinguishing Reasons and Causes 54 Chapter Three: Storms over Konigsberg 85 Chapter Four: The Paradox of Freedom 116 Chapter Five: The Odd Triangle: Kant, Nietzsche, and Freud 146 Chapter Six: Who Is the Subject? 174 Chapter Seven: The Ethical Turn 196 Notes 227 References 277 Index 305

    1 in stock

    £28.80

  • Analytical Psychology in Exile

    Princeton University Press Analytical Psychology in Exile

    5 in stock

    Book Synopsis"Published with support of the Philemon Foundation this book is part of the Philemon series of the Philemon Foundation."Trade Review"Erich Neumann's place in the history of analytical psychology may finally find the positive reassessment it deserves via this collection of his correspondence with Carl Jung... Perhaps most importantly, these letters allow us to see a mutually enriching exchange of ideas that formed a significant, though underappreciated, passage of intellectual history. This is essential reading for anyone interested in the theoretical origins of psychoanalysis."--Publishers WeeklyTable of ContentsAcknowledgments vii Introduction xi I. The First Encounter xi II. C. G. Jung in the 1930s xiv III. Correspondence between Palestine and Zurich, 1934-40 xviii Zionism, the Jewish People, and Palestine xviii The Earth Archetype xx Discussing Anti-Semitism xxi Kirsch-Neumann Controversy xxvii The Rosenthal Review xxviii Last Time in Zurich xxx IV. The Long Interval, 1940-45 xxxii V. Correspondence between Israel and Zurich, 1945-60 xxxiv In Touch with Europe Again xxxiv Coming Back to Switzerland xxxvii Enemies in Zurich: The New Ethic xlii Partial Reconciliation with Zurich l Late Recognition liv VI. The Legacy of Erich Neumann lv Editorial Remarks lix Translator's Note lxi List of Letters 1 Correspondence 7 Appendix I 355 Appendix II 361 Bibliography 371 Index 411

    5 in stock

    £29.75

  • The Existentialist Critique of Freud  The Crisis

    Princeton University Press The Existentialist Critique of Freud The Crisis

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisAlthough largely sympathetic to Freud's clinical achievement, the existentialists criticized Freudian metapsychology as inappropriate to a truly humanistic psychology. Gerald Izenberg evaluates the critique of Freud in the work of two existential philosophers, Martin Heidegger and Jean-Paul Sartre, and two existential psychiatrists, Ludwig BinswangTable of Contents*Frontmatter, pg. i*Preface, pg. vii*Table of Contents, pg. xi*Introduction. The Crisis of Autonomy, pg. 1*Chapter One. The Positivist Foundation of Freud's Theory of Meaning, pg. 13*Chapter Two. The Background of the Existential Critique, pg. 70*Chapter Three. The Existential Critique of Psychoanalytic Theory, pg. 108*Chapter Four. The Historical Significance of the Existential Critique, pg. 166*Chapter Five. The Existentialist Concept of the Self, pg. 218*Chapter Six. Authenticity as an Ethic and as a Concept of Health, pg. 250*Chapter Seven. Ideology and Social Theory in Psychoanalysis and Existentialism, pg. 290*Bibliography, pg. 336*Index, pg. 347

    1 in stock

    £45.00

  • Zizek A Critical Introduction

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Zizek A Critical Introduction

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisZizek is hailed as the most significant interdisciplinary thinker of modern times. His work is a powerful, often explosive combination of Lacanian psychoanalysis and philosophy which tests key psychoanalytical concepts against the ideas of major European thinkers, especially Hegel.Trade Review"Kay's introduction is a much more thorough and rigorous study, and her elucidation of the influence of German idealism on Zizek's thinking is by far the best of any of the introductions under consideration." Sean Homer, GrammaTable of ContentsPreface and Acknowledgements. Chapter 1: Introduction: thinking, writing and reading about the real. Chapter 2: Dialectic and the real: Lacan, Hegel, and the alchemy of après-coup. Chapter 3: ‘Reality’ and the real: culture as anamorphosis:. Chapter 4: The real of sexual difference: imagining, thinking, being. Chapter 5: Ethics and the real: the ungodly virtues of psychoanalysis. Chapter 6: Politics, or, the art of the impossible. Glossary of Žižekian terms. Notes. Bibliography. Index

    1 in stock

    £49.50

  • Psychoanalysis

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Psychoanalysis

    7 in stock

    Book Synopsis* For the first time, English-speaking readers will have access to one of the most influential books published in the discipline in the past 30 years. * Psychoanalysis, Its Image and Its Public is in many ways the founding text of the theory of social representations and is, as such, a modern classic.Trade Review"It has been a great pleasure to read this book – its thorough scholarship and entertaining writing style make it into a masterpiece. As a concise history of recent social psychology worldwide (1960s–1970s), it is a unique treatise on the institutional moves and personal relationships of leading social psychologists on both sides of the Atlantic. This sophisticated case study adds a crucial voice to historical and sociological scholarship. It will be particularly useful at graduate and postgraduate levels – in courses on history of psychology in general, and in special seminars on history of social psychology.This book covers the material precisely as I would like, and will be ideal for use in my seminars as core reading." Jaan Valsiner, Clark University "This is a richly documented and vivid account of key events in the formation of an academic discipline. It shows how individuals make history, albeit not in conditions of their own making, by seeking an alternative path for the globalization of knowledge. The book traces the apparent failure of the project of rescuing a social psychology of human beings from the global diffusion of a local USA model (individualist, prescriptive, ethnocentric). Ironically, this 'invisible college' was initiated by a visionary group of US scholars mobilizing allies in Europe, Latin America, and Asia under adverse Cold-War conditions. This is an encouraging book. The project of a universally relevant social psychology will continue to inspire the quest for genuine human understanding." Martin W. Bauer, London School of Economics "This fascinating and important book makes out a carefully documented and persuasive case that one virtually forgotten committee, more than any other body, was responsible for shaping the international social psychology we know today. The book will be an essential source for future research on and understanding of the history of social psychology and anyone with an interest in that history really should read it." Colin Fraser, University of CambridgeTable of ContentsPreface by Daniel LagacheForeword to the Second EditionPreliminary RemarksPart OneThe Social Representation of PsychoanalysisFindings of Survey and Theoretical AnalysisChapter One Social Representation: A Lost Concept1 Miniatures of Behaviour, Copies of Reality and Forms of Knowledge2 Philosophies of Indirect Experience3 In What Sense is a Representation Social?Chapter Two Psychoanalysis as She is Spoken1 The Presence of Psychoanalysis2 The Taboo on Communications and the Attractions of IgnoranceChapter Three Ideas That Become Common-Sense Objects1 Objectification2 From Theory to Social Representation3 The Materialisation of ConceptsChapter Four ‘Homo Psychanalyticus’1 Classifying and Naming2 The Internal Boundary Between the Normal and the Pathological3 Who Needs Psychoanalysis?Chapter Five A Marginal Hero1 The Psychoanalyst: Magician or Psychiatrist?2 Social Relations and Role-Playing3 How the Audience sees the ActorChapter Six The Psychoanalysis of Everyday Life1 Description of the Second Major Process: Anchoring2 Current activities courante and Analytic Therapy3 Self-AnalystsChapter Seven A Freud for All Seasons1 The Need for Analysis2 The Extent of Psychoanalysis’s domains of application3 Does Psychoanalysis Work?Chapter Eight Ideologies and Their Discontents1 Psychoanalysis, Religion and Politics2 The Values of Private LifeChapter Nine Of Jargon in General and Franco-Analytic Jargon in Particular1 Language and Languages in Conflict2 Speech Becomes a RealityChapter Ten Natural Thought: Observation Made In the Course of Interviews1 Phenomenological Remarks2 The Style of Natural Thought3 Two Principles of Intellectual Organisation4 The Collective Intellect: Tower of Babel or Well-Ordered Diversity?Part TwoPsychoanalysis and the French PressContent Analysis and Analysis of Systems of CommunicationChapter One The Press: Overview1 Who Talks about Psychoanalysis?2 The Many Faces of Psychoanalysis3 Attitudes, Groups and Ideological OrientationsChapter Two The Diffusion of Psychoanalysis1 First Descriptions2 Rhetoric to the Fore3 Language, The Fiction of Communication and impregnation4 OverviewChapter Three The Encounter Between Religious Dogma andPsychoanalytic Principles1 Propagation: Its Characteristics and Its Domain2 The Assimilation and Adaptation of Profane Notions3 In Search of a Catholic Conception of PsychoanalysisChapter Four The Communist Party Meets a Science that is Very Popular and Non-Marxist1 Theoretical Perspectives2 What Can We Expect to Read in a Communist or Progressive Publication?3 What Anti-Psychoanalytic Propaganda Are We Talking About?Chapter Five A Psychosociological Analysis of Propaganda1 The Functions of Propaganda2 Cognitive Aspects and Representation in Propaganda3 Representation As a Tool for Action4 Language and Action5 Final ObservationsFifteen Years LaterChapter Six A HypothesisAfterwordAppendixBibliography

    7 in stock

    £18.99

  • Our Dark Side

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Our Dark Side

    7 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhere does perversion begin? Who is perverse? Ever since the word first appeared in the Middle Ages, anyone who delights in evil and in the destruction of the self or others has been described as ''perverse''. But while the experience of perversion is universal, every era has seen it and dealt with it in its own way. The history of perversion in the West is told here through a study of great emblematic figures of the perverse - Gilles de Rais, the mystical saints and the flagellants in the middle ages, the Marquis de Sade in the eighteenth century, the masturbating child, the male homosexual and the hysterical woman nineteenth century, Nazism in the twentieth century, and the complementary figures of the paedophile and the terrorist in the twenty-first. The perverse are rarely talked about and when they are it is usually only to be condemned. They are commonly viewed as monstrous and cruel, as something alien to the very nature of being human. And yet, perversion can also atTrade Review"In this provocative, timely, and engaging study of famous perverse figures, Elisabeth Roudinesco offers us a ‘dark mirror' for human experience. She persuasively argues that because perversion is a uniquely human activity, it allows us to gain access to aspects of the human psyche that are normally hidden from view. By examining case histories of perversion throughout history, Roudinesco shows that perverts provide us with a disturbing reflection of the dark side of the very human societies in which they perform their extreme acts." Elissa Marder, Emory University "This fascinating book takes us from the question of the origin of the perverse through its semiotic displacements in Christianity and libertinism, by way of Freud as a thinker of the dark Enlightenment, into the emergence of contemporary biocracy and genocide as delight in evil. Required reading for all studies of the history of consciousness." Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Columbia UniversityTable of ContentsIntroduction. I The Sublime and The Abject. II Sade Pro and Contra Sade. III Dark Enlightenment or Barbaric Science? IV The Auschwitz Confessions. V The Perverse Society. Bibliography.

    7 in stock

    £49.50

  • Formations of the Unconscious

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Formations of the Unconscious

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhen I decided to explore the question of Witz, or wit, with you this year, I undertook a small enquiry. It will come as no surprise at all that I began by questioning a poet.Table of ContentsTranslator’s Note Abbreviations The Freudian structures of wit I. The Famillionaire II. The Fat-millionaire III. The Miglionaire IV. The Golden Calf V. A Bit-of-Sense and the Step-of-Sense VI. Whoah, Neddy! VII. Une Femme de Non-Recevoir, or : A Flat Refusal THE LOGIC OF CASTRATION VIII. Foreclosure of the Name-of-the-Father IX. The Paternal Metaphor X. The Three Moments of the Oedipus Complex (I) XI. The Three Moments of the Oedipus Complex (II) XII. From Image to Signifier Ð in Pleasure and in Reality XIII. Fantasy, Beyond the Pleasure Principle THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE PHALLUS XIV. Desire and Jouissance XV. The Girl and the Phallus XVI. Insignias of the Ideal XVII. The Formulas of Desire XVIII. Symptoms and Their Masks XIX. Signifier, Bar and Phallus The dialectic of desire and demand in the clinical study and treatment of the neuroses XX. The Dream by the Butcher’s Beautiful Wife XXI. The ‘Still Waters Run Deep’ Dreams XXII. The Other’s Desire XXIII. The Obsessional and his Desire XXIV. Transference and Suggestion XXV. The Signification of the Phallus in the Treatment XXVI. The Circuits of Desire XXVII. Exiting via the Symptom XXVIII. You Are the One You Hate APPENDICES The Graph of Desire Explanation of the Schemas Editor’s Note Translator’s Endnotes Index

    4 in stock

    £28.50

  • Transference

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Transference

    Book SynopsisAlcibiades attempted to seduce Socrates, he wanted to make him, and in the most openly avowed way possible, into someone instrumental and subordinate to what? To the object of Alcibiades desire agalma, the good object. I would go even further.Trade Review"It is to the benefit of the broader Lacanian world that this pitch-perfect translation – a decade or more in the making – is now available. Longtime Lacan translator, Bruce Fink, and Polity Press, both deserve commendation for this new addition to the series of Lacan�s seminars available in English. The scrupulous attention that has been dedicated to translating Lacan�s French into idiomatic English, the research evident in the detailed translator�s end-notes, and the formatting and finish of the final product (which includes a beautiful detail of Raphael�s School of Athens as a cover illustration) warrant it a special place in this series." Psychodynamic PracticeTable of ContentsI. In the Beginning Was Love II. Set and Characters III. The Metaphor of Love: Phaedrus IV. The Psychology of the Rich: Pausanias V. Medical Harmony: Eryximachus VI. Deriding the Sphere: Aristophanes VII. The Atopia of Eros: Agathon VIII. From Epistéme to Mýthos IX. Exit from the Ultra-World X. Ágalma XI. Between Socrates and Alcibiades XII. Transference in the Present XIII. A Critique of Countertransference XIV. Demand and Desire in the Oral and Anal Stages XV. Oral, Anal, and Genital XVI. Psyche and the Castration Complex XVII. The Symbol XVIII. Real Presence XIX. Sygne’s No XX. Turelure’s Abjection XXI. Pensée’s Desire XXII. Structural Decomposition XXIII. Slippage in the Meaning of the Ideal XXIV. Identification via “ein einziger Zug” XXV. The Relationship between Anxiety and Desire XXVI. “A Dream of a Shadow Is Man” XXVII. Mourning the Loss of the Analyst

    £58.50

  • Mirrors of Memory

    Cornell University Press Mirrors of Memory

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisPhotographs shaped the view of the world in turn-of-the-century Central Europe, bringing images of everything from natural and cultural history to masterpieces of Greek sculpture into homes and offices. Sigmund Freud''s libraryno exception to this trendwas filled with individual photographs and images in books. According to Mary Bergstein, these photographs also profoundly shaped Freud''s thinking in ways that were no less important because they may have been involuntary and unconscious.In Mirrors of Memory, lavishly illustrated with reproductions of the photos from Freud''s voluminous collection, she argues that studying the man and his photographs uncovers a key to the origins of psychoanalysis. In Freud''s era, photographs were viewed as transparent windows revealing objective truth but at the same time were highly subjective, resembling a kind of dream-memory. Thus, a photo of a ruined temple both depicted the particular place and conveyed a sense of loss, oblivion, of tiTrade ReviewAn erudite and original book... [on] the far-reaching effects of European fin de siècle visual culture on Freud's mind. Mirrors of Memory illuminates the heretofore unexamined ways in which the medium of photography, widely taken to be a transparent, objective way of documenting and gaining access to a previously existing reality, was relied on by many disciplines during Freud's lifetime.... This extraordinary book... is a paragon in the annals of interdisciplinary scholarship.... In teaching us to look back and to realize that we had missed an entire field of force in which the interpretations we thought we understood took place, it opens onto new vistas and suggests new paradigms for exciting twenty-first-century interdisciplinary work. -- Ellen Handler Spitz * Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association *Bergstein's book significantly furthers our understanding of Freud’s Vienna and her rich data and analysis open many avenues for further research, particularly on the question of how the modern innovation of photography affected the development of art history and psychoanalysis in the late nineteenth century.... Bergstein provides a rich archive of information and analyses that future scholars will no doubt find indispensable. -- Maya Balakirsky Katz * Visual Resources *Bringing analytic understanding to bear on cultural production, Bergstein explores the impact of photography on the human dynamics of perception, memory, and desire. At the same time, Mirrors of Memory historicizes psychoanalysis, shedding light on the circumstances that positioned Freud to formulate a new understanding of mental life.... Bergstein highlights the rigor with which Freud approached his investigations of mental life. She also enriches our understanding with her careful demonstration of the ways in which 'photographic presence and surrogacy were deeply embedded in Freud's visual imagination.’. -- Anne Golomb Hoffmann * DeWitt Wallace Institute for the History of Psychiatry Annual *

    1 in stock

    £22.79

  • Impious Fidelity

    Cornell University Press Impious Fidelity

    7 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn Impious Fidelity, Suzanne Stewart-Steinberg investigates the legacy of Anna Freud at the intersection between psychoanalysis as a mode of thinking and theorizing and its existence as a political entity. Stewart-Steinberg argues that because Anna Freud inherited and guided her father''s psychoanalytic project as an institution, analysis of her thought is critical to our understanding of the relationship between the psychoanalytic and the political. This is particularly the case given that many psychoanalysts and historians of psychiatry charge that Anna Freud's emphasis on defending the supremacy of the ego against unconscious drives betrayed her father's work. Are the unconscious and the psychoanalytic project itself at odds with the stable ego deemed necessary to a democratic politics? Hannah Arendt famously (and influentially) argued that they are. But Stewart-Steinberg maintains that Anna Freud's critics (particularly disciples of Melanie Klein) have simplified her thouTrade ReviewAnna Freud—criticized by Lacanians and Kleinians for mitigating the importance of the unconscious in human life—gets her due in this brilliant work.... For Stewart-Steinberg, her central insight is 'altruistic surrender,' in which ambition is experienced magnanimously rather than aggressively, displaced onto an other who stands as a proxy for the self. By making the other a representative of the self, psychoanalysis informs a democratic politics. A significant work of scholarship, this book is required reading for anyone interested in the history of psychoanalysis and its relationship to theories of gender and politics. Summing Up: Essential. * Choice *Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. A Wider Social Stage 2. Girls Will Be Boys: Gender, Envy, and the Freudian Social Contract 3. Anna-Antigone: Experiments in Group Upbringing 4. The Defense of Psychoanalysis/The Anxiety of Politics Conclusion: Ego PoliticsBibliography Index

    7 in stock

    £37.05

  • A Compulsion for Antiquity  Freud and the Ancient

    Cornell University Press A Compulsion for Antiquity Freud and the Ancient

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis"If psychoanalysis is the return of repressed antiquity, distorted to be sure by modern desire, yet still bearing the telltale traces of the ancient archive, then would not our growing distance from the archive of antiquity also imply that we are in...Trade ReviewA most subtle, ingenious and sophisticated intervention into debates concerning Freud's legacy. -- Vanda Zajko * Journal of Hellenic Studies *It is surely no sign of neurosis to find the questions discussed in this book as compelling as they are timely. In an entirely non-clinical sense, everyone engaged in cultural history, cultural studies, and the history of ideas will be anxious to read it. -- Paul Bishop * Times Literary Supplement *This wonderfully reasoned, scholarly book eloquently addresses the many meanings to Freud of the ancient statuettes that he collected and cherished. Armstrong sees these statues as symbols of themes that fascinated Freud—for example, Greek and Egyptian culture as a way of understanding the underpinnings of world civilization. The author makes a case for Freud's narrative reconstructions of the past of individuals as related to his own Jewishness, a thorny point for some scholars, Peter Gay among them. Armstrong backs up ideas with close readings of Freud's voluminous correspondence, his formal writings, and the writing of his patients, H.D. among them; all comment on the statuary and Freud's use of them in analytic conversation. Contemplating Freud's education and his worldview in fresh ways, this book puts Freud in historical context. His notions about mythological figures such as Oedipus and his interpretations of Moses, or Leonardo, shed new light on his creation of psychoanalysis. A book for all who are interested in psychoanalysis. Summing Up: Essential. * Choice *Altogether, a serious, profoundly scholarly, and provocative addition to the growing volume of interdisciplinary literature on psychoanalysis and its evolution. * The Institute for the History of Psychiatry Annual *Intellectual historians will be grateful for this path-breaking humanistic exploration of a subject that has been unduly neglected until now. * American Journal of Psychiatry *This is an important contribution to Freud/psychoanalysis studies and the history of 19th and 20th c. German(-Jewish) Bildungsbürgertum. In many ways it is a superb example of a cross-disciplinary study, for it drives home that while we social scientists may well have gained much from specialization, those scholars able to breach modern disciplinary boundaries can reveal a great deal about our collective historical archive as well as our continuing interest in (the history of) psychoanalysis. -- David D. Lee * Journal for the History of the Behavioral Sciences *

    1 in stock

    £24.29

  • Dreaming and Storytelling

    Cornell University Press Dreaming and Storytelling

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisAre dreams merely odd things that happen to us at night, sometimes pleasant, sometimes terrifying, but not to be taken too seriously? Is there any reason to think about them at all, other than in terms of questions such as ''Why should Aunt Sarah turn into a bird and invite us all to dinner in her sycamore tree?In this witty and eminently readable book, Bert O. States rethinks both the meaning of dreams and the relationship between dreaming and the telling of stories. Dreams constitute a private literature of the self, he says, thatdespite their seeming lack of order or structurecan help us to understand the very nature of shared literature.Observers have often pointed out narrative elements that are common to dreams and storiesincluding cinematic visual techniques and such plot devices as reversals of fortune and paired villains and antagonists. Drawing on current work in such fields as neurobiology, cognitive psychology, literary theory, and dream theory, States asksTrade ReviewDreaming and Storytelling is both intriguing and complex. We are not only art-making animals but also dream-producing animals, compelled to interpret and re-create our life through imaginative forays and retrievals, even while asleep, and this book explores the complex and ambiguous relationship between dreaming and storytelling. * Modern Language Review *Bert O. States's Dreaming and Storytelling aims at a kind of phenomenological flattening. It seeks to remove from our descriptions of dreaming the idea of hidden intentions and unconscious motivations, the seductions of the buried archetype, of the occulted or repressed meaning. It questions commonplace pictures of surface and depth. Dreaming and Storytelling is a very personal book; it offers pieces of the author's conversation with himself, a report about his own dreams, an attempt to put into dialogue a number of writers he has read and struggled over, an assessment of doubts and suspicions. * Comparative Literature Studies *States' comparison of dreams to the structures and archetypes of waking narratives makes excellent use of narrative theory and is laden with provocative insights. * Psychoanalytic Books: A Quarterly Journal of Reviews *Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. The Problem of Bizarreness 2. Beginnings, Middles, and Endings 3. The Master Forms 4. Scripts and Archetypes 5. Meaning in Dreams and Fictions ConclusionReferences Index

    1 in stock

    £22.49

  • Fighting for Life  Contest Sexuality and

    Cornell University Press Fighting for Life Contest Sexuality and

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhat accounts for the popularity of the macho image, the fanaticism of sports enthusiasts, and the perennial appeal of Don Quixote's ineffectual struggles? In Fighting for Life, Walter J. Ong addresses these and related questions, offering insight into the role of competition in human existence. Focusing on the ways in which human life is...Trade Review"Fighting for Life is a book about contest, the agonia of the Greek arena, and its roots in male life, especially academia. Ong describes this work as an 'excavation' which was prompted by his previous explorations of such areas as the characteristics of oral and literate cultures, Peter Ramus and his 16th-century intellectual milieu, and the early dominance and more recent decline of classical rhetoric in education. In Fighting for Life, he weaves the results of a year's study of agonistic structures running through the biological, social, and noetic worlds. Describing his text as an 'essay in noobiology,' the biological roots of human consciousness, Ong claims that 'contest has been a major factor in organic evolution and it turns out to have been a major, and seemingly essential, factor in intellectual development.' ... The work is a valuable synthesis of a wide body of research and theory."-Rhetoric Society Quarterly

    1 in stock

    £26.59

  • Lacan Discourse and Social Change  A

    Cornell University Press Lacan Discourse and Social Change A

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisConvinced that cultural criticism need not merely be an academic exercise but can help improve people's lives, Mark Bracher proposes a method of cultural criticism which is based on the principles of psychoanalytic treatment and which aims to alter...Trade Review"In addition to his lucid presentation of Lacanian theory, Bracher's readings of political and literary discourses furnish a fresh perspective on familiar topics and texts. His objective of making cultural criticism socially significant raises important questions about the functions of criticism and of pedagogy. A thoroughly interesting, appealing, and original book.""The project of designing a Lacanian cultural criticism is an ongoing and crucial one, and this book will make a significant contribution to current discussion. It is distinctive in both its theoretical core and its areas of critical analysis. In addition, Bracher's critique of New Historicism is astute and timely and should be productively controversial." -- Julia Reinhard Lupton and Kenneth Reinhard

    1 in stock

    £27.54

  • Racism in Mind

    Cornell University Press Racism in Mind

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis philosophical analysis of the phenomenon of racism brings together some of the most influential analytic philosophers writing on racism today. The introduction by Tamas Pataki outlines the historical and thematic development of conceptions of...Trade Review"Michael P. Levine and Tamas Pataki have assembled an outstanding collection of essays by an impressively broad group of philosophers and social theorists. This is a stimulating and conceptually wide-ranging invitation to intelligent, philosophically informed discussion about the nature, sources, and implications of racism." -- Michele M. Moody-Adams, Director and Hutchinson Professor, Ethics and Public Life, Cornell University"Philosophers are good at making many and fine distinctions. When that does not undermine our capacity to see the forest for the trees, it is a great service to thought. Racism in Mind provides such a service at a time when it is desperately needed. All the essays in it are of unusually high standard. In this book readers will find the passion and moral seriousness its subject matter deserves, but also the sobriety and discipline that it seldom gets. To read this book is to embark on an intellectual adventure. At the same time, its rigorous attention to evidence and its hard-headed explorations of the psychological and social causes of racism keep readers close to reality. For this achievement its editors deserve high praise." -- Raimond Gaita, Professor of Moral Philosophy, University of London King's College"Racism in Mind is noteworthy for its focus on racism, rather than racial categories, the concept of race, or racial identity. The greatest strength of the book is its specialized, interdisciplinary combination of philosophy and psychology. It includes specifically psychological analyses not often seen in a philosophical study of racism." -- Naomi Zack, Professor of Philosophy, University of Oregon, and author of Philosophy of Science and Race

    10 in stock

    £26.35

  • Reading Lacan

    Cornell University Press Reading Lacan

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe influence of the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan has extended into nearly every field of the humanities and social sciences—from literature and film studies to anthropology and social work. yet Lacan's major text, Ecrits, continues to perplex...Trade ReviewOperating like characters in a narrative, Gallop's shifting reading strategies invigorate critical discourse by creating a theatre of interpretation. Reading Lacan accentuates the desire to interrogate the voices in any reading, and Gallop's stream of dialogue... provides a textual opportunity to discourse on Lacanian theory.... Rejecting the traditional endings of novels, the limited options of marriage and death, Gallop's account moves toward the plural possibilities of a feminist reading practice.... Gallop's navigation of 'doing reading' is a theatrical event essential for anyone invested in the process of reading as meaning-construction, but especially for feminist theorists seeking alternative structures to chart the experience of knowledge. * Women's Review of Books *

    1 in stock

    £26.99

  • The Purloined Poe Lacan Derrida and

    Johns Hopkins University Press The Purloined Poe Lacan Derrida and

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisHis far-reaching claims about language and truth provoked a vigorous critique by Jacques Derrida, whose essay in turn has spawned further responses from Barbara Johnson, Jane Gallop, Irene Harvey, Norman Holland, and others.Trade ReviewIn the story of the interpretations, reinterpretations, displacements, and replacements that have accreted around Poe's 'The Purloined Letter,' this collection, The Purloined Poe, comes like an answer to a... riddle. -- Hana Charney Psychoanalytic Books A valuable, critical text. Year's Work in English Studies A fascinating volume for both the fledgling and the besotted amateurs of contemporary criticism. Library JournalTable of ContentsPrefacePart I. Poe and LacanChapter 1. Text of "The Purloined Letter," with NotesChapter 2. Seminar of "The Purloined Letter"Chapter 3. Lacan's Seminar of "The Purloined Letter" OverviewChapter 4. Lacan's Seminar of "The Purloined Letter": Map of the TextChapter 5. Lacan's Seminar of "The Purloined Letter": Notes to the TextPart II. On Psychoanalytic ReadingChapter 6. Selections from The Life and Works of Edgar Allan Poe: A Psycho-analytic InterpretationChapter 7. On Reading Poetry: Reflections on the Limits and Possibilities of Psychoanalytic ApproachesPart III. Derrida and ResponsesChapter 8. The Challenge of DeconstructionsChapter 9. The Purveyor of Truth, translated by Alan BassChapter 10. The Frame of Reference: Poe, Lacan, DerridaChapter 11. Structures of exemplarity in Poe, Freud, Lacan, and DerridaChapter 12. The American otherPart IV. Other ReadingsChapter 13. Narratorial Authority and "The Purloined Letter"Chapter 14. Re-covering "The Purloined Latter": Reading as a Personal TransactionChapter 15. The Shadow's Shadow: The Motif of the Double in Edgar Allan Poe's "The Purloined Letter"Chapter 16. A Notes on Time in "The Purloined Letter"Chapter 17. Negation in "The Purloined Letter": Hegel, Poe, and LacanReferencesContributorsIndex

    1 in stock

    £29.70

  • The Freudian Subject

    Stanford University Press The Freudian Subject

    Book SynopsisA Stanford University Press classic.Trade Review“This masterly book will be indispensable to all future discussions of Freud.”—Jean-Luc Nancy

    £21.59

  • Psychoanalyzing

    Stanford University Press Psychoanalyzing

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisScarcely any theoretical discourse has had greater impact on literary and cultural studies than psychoanalysis, and yet hardly any theoretical discourse is more widely misunderstood and abused. In Psychoanalyzing, Serge Leclaire offers a thorough and lucid exposition of the psychoanalysis that has emerged from the French return to Freud, unfolding and elaborating the often enigmatic pronouncements of Jacques Lacan and patiently working through the central tenets of the Ecole freudienne. As a concise but nuanced introduction to the subject, Psychoanalyzing will prove indispensable to anyone interested in psychoanalysis, especially those curious about its Lacanian reconceptualization and the linguistic theory of the unconscious and its effects.Leclaire''s study is particularly valuable for the way its author links theoretical issues to psychoanalytic practice. The opening chapteron listeninghighlights the necessity, and the impossibility, of the floating attentionTable of ContentsContents 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

    1 in stock

    £74.70

  • Psychoanalyzing On the Order of the Unconscious

    Stanford University Press Psychoanalyzing On the Order of the Unconscious

    Book SynopsisThe author, one of the first practicing psychoanalysts to join Lacan's school, here offers a lucid exposition of the psychoanalysis that has emerged from the French "return to Freud," analyzing the often enigmatic pronouncements of Lacan and working through the central tenets of the "Ecole freudienne."Table of ContentsContents 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

    £17.99

  • Resistances of Psychoanalysis

    Stanford University Press Resistances of Psychoanalysis

    Book SynopsisIn this stimulating and often startling book, Derrida examines the various "resistances" to analysis-conceived not only as a phenomenon theorized at the heart of psychoanalysis, but as psychoanalysis's resistance to itself. The book comprises three essays devoted to Freud, Lacan, and Foucault.Trade Review'An engrossing critique of psychoanalysis, a confessional memoir, a tale of intellectual influences, a history of the great twentieth-century love affairwith Freudian thought - such is Resistance of Psychoanalysis, a book to raise the level of debate over the politics of deconstruction several notches.' The AustralianTable of Contents1. Resistances 2. For the love of Lacan 3. 'To do justice to Freud': the history of madness in the age of psychoanalysis.

    £17.99

  • The Legend of Freud

    Stanford University Press The Legend of Freud

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisPsychoanalysis is dead! Again and again this obituary is pronounced, with ever-increasing conviction in newspapers and scholarly journals alike. But the ghost of Freud and his thought continues to haunt those who would seal the grave. The Legend of Freud shows why psychoanalysis has remained uncanny, not just for its enemies but for its advocates and practitioners as welland why it continues to fascinate us. For psychoanalysis is not just a theory of psychic conflict: it is a thought in conflict with itself. Often violent, the conflicts of psychoanalysis are most productive where they remain unresolved, thus producing a text that must be read: deciphered, interpreted, rewritten. Psychoanalysis: legenda est.ReviewThe Legend of Freud is a fine example of what can be done with Freud''s texts when philosophical and literary approaches converge, and you leave the couch in the other room. . . . Like Lacan and Derrida, Weber doesn''t Trade Review"The Legend of Freud is a fine example of what can be done with Freud's texts when philosophical and literary approaches converge, and you leave the couch in the other room. . . . Weber is brilliantly imaginative, respectful of his subject and his readers, and productive of new ideas." -- Village Voice Literary SupplementTable of ContentsContents Part 1. Part 2. Part 3.

    1 in stock

    £84.15

  • The Legend of Freud Cultural Memory in the

    Stanford University Press The Legend of Freud Cultural Memory in the

    Book SynopsisThis text argues that psychoanalysis is not just a theory of psychic conflict: it is a thought in conflict with itself. This is a study of Freud's defences of psychoanalysis and the conflicts into which psychoanalytic theory has been drawn.Trade Review"The Legend of Freud is a fine example of what can be done with Freud's texts when philosophical and literary approaches converge, and you leave the couch in the other room. . . . Weber is brilliantly imaginative, respectful of his subject and his readers, and productive of new ideas." -- Village Voice Literary SupplementTable of ContentsContents Part 1. Part 2. Part 3.

    £22.79

  • Lacan and the Matter of Origins

    Stanford University Press Lacan and the Matter of Origins

    Book SynopsisLacan and the Matter of Origins traces the development of Lacan''s thinking about the role of the mother in psychical formation. It examines the conceptual struggle throughout his work over issues of maternal agency in relation to the constitution of human subjectivity, and the theoretical, historical, and autobiographical reasons for this struggle. Lacan is widely held to emphasize the paternal dimension of human subjectivity and the phallic signifier. This book demonstrates that the mother occupies a crucial position in the Lacanian project, even if the maternal relation is not systematically theorized. The maternal figure appears as a Cheshire Cat who fades away and reappears at different times.The book traces the major shifts in Lacan''s understanding of the maternal within an intertextual framework that includes Augustine, Klein, Kojève, and Rank. Pursuing in Lacan''s writings the sometimes contradictory or unassimilable functions of the mother, the book closely tTrade Review“This outstanding book represents an entirely new approach to Lacan, treating the historical development in his work of theoretical shifts in the understanding of the mother in psychic development. I think it will be received as one of the most important introductions to and commentaries on Lacan in English.”—Daniel Boyarin, University of California, BerkeleyTable of ContentsAbbreviations; Introduction; 1. A brief history of The Origin of the World: Courbet and Lacan; 2. Early Hetero-orthodoxies: Lacan's family complexes; 3. 'History is not the Past': Lacan's critique of Ferenczi; 4. On chimpanzees and children in the looking-glass: Wallon's mirror experiments and Lacan's theory of reflective recognition; 5. Topographies of conflict: the Machia in the mirror stage; 6. 'Lacannibalism': the return to Freud's idea of identification; 7. Augustine in contexts (Part I): the riddle of a repetition; 8. Augustine in contexts (Part II): three variations on a scene from the Confessions; 9. 'Grandma, what a dreadfully big mouth you have!' Lacan's parables of the maternal object; Epilogue; Notes; Index.

    £26.99

  • Tales from the Freudian Crypt

    Stanford University Press Tales from the Freudian Crypt

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTales from the Freudian Crypt is a fundamental reassessment of the Freud legend that aims to shake the very foundations of Freud studies. Writing from the perspective of intellectual history, the author traces the impact that Freud''s essay Beyond the Pleasure Principle has had, and continues to have, on twentieth-century thought. Designed as both an introduction and a corrective to the vast literature on Freud, the book explores the trail left by Freud''s late theory of the death drive, paying special attention to its ramifications in the fields of biography, biology, psychotherapy, philosophy, and literary theory. The author ironically concludes that if there were such a thing as a death drive, it would look like this seemingly endless and in many ways arbitrary proliferation of the literature on Freud.After first undertaking to demystify the pretensions of this literature, from the works of Sandor Ferenczi to those of Jacques Lacan, the author proposes a theoTrade Review"Here is a brilliant, wide-ranging, exuberant book by a young scholar who knows the literature surrounding psychoanalysis as thoroughly, and as cannily, as anyone alive. Nowhere has the deep strangeness of Freud's mind and tradition been more tellingly explored. It is a marvelous contribution not only to Freud studies but to modern intellectual history as well."—Frederick Crews, University of California, Berkeley"An excellent text. Psychoanalysis in Dufresne's hands reads like a comic book concerned with horror, a thanatographical delight written not so much for adolescent boys but for philosophers . . . The proverbial stake in the heart that finally kills the undead monster is delivered by Dufresne with a gusto and verve not normally found in academic books on psychoanalysis. Dufresne is the vampire slayer of the Freud-bashers."—Gary Genosko, The Semiotic Review of Books"Dufresne is nothing if not a rigorous archaeologist, the connoisseur of delectable fragments, the shards of folly that give us clues to an entire civilization. As he dusts off each recovered piece and sets it on the shelf, he constructs not so much an argument as a gallery: an exhibition of curiosities."—Mark Shechner, The Boston Book Review"Five stars. A seminal,groundbreaking body of work . . . Tales is a highly recommended contribution to Freudian studies and would admirably serve as a model approach to evaluating and expanding other Freudian concepts throughout the coming decades."—Midwest Book Review"Dufresne's original, provocative, and scholarly work is a major intervention in current debates about the import and significance of psychoanalysis. It is a much needed blood transfusion that will cause a stir."—Rodolphe Gasché, State University of New York at Buffalo"Dufresne surveys this huge and untidy literature, but he knows better than to simply critique it. Rather than adding one more critical life-support system to the ever-proliferating body of psychoanalysis, he advocates its right to die: leave it alone, let it choke to death on its own waste, like the infusorians described by Freud in Beyond the Pleasure Principle. Dufresne reads Freud like no other, understanding full well that psychoanalysis is fundamentally immune to criticism, because it was never concerned with reality."—Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen, University of WashingtonTable of ContentsContents Borch-Jacobsen Mikkel 1. 2. 3.

    1 in stock

    £89.10

  • Sciences of the Flesh Representing Body and

    Stanford University Press Sciences of the Flesh Representing Body and

    Book SynopsisPsychoanalysis may be said to have been born in the 20th century, Freud said late in his career, but it did not drop from the skies ready-made. This is a re-assessment of Freud and the historical development of pyschoanalysis.Trade Review"This is a major work of cultural and intellectual history. . . . A landmark in the interpretation of psychoanalysis in its genesis and emergence, it is also a major explanation of how we came to view the subject the way many or most people do today." -- J. Hillis Miller * University of California, Irvine *"Sciences of the Flesh is a demanding, but rich study, and a short review cannot do it justice. It has made me want to return to Freud, understanding him as a part of nineteenth-century psychology, and not as its nemesis." * Victorian Studies *Table of ContentsIntroduction: flesh, ghost, and history; 1. A rhetoric of hysteria; 2. Toujours la chose genitale; 3. Experiments made by nature; 4. Fat and blood, and how to make them; 5. The logic of sex; 6. Scenes of discovery; 7. Stories of suffering; Conclusion: psychoanalysis proper; Notes; Bibliography; Index.

    £26.99

  • Tales from the Freudian Crypt The Death Drive in

    Stanford University Press Tales from the Freudian Crypt The Death Drive in

    Book SynopsisA fundamental reassessment of the Freud legend that aims to shake the very foundations of Freud studies.Trade Review"Here is a brilliant, wide-ranging, exuberant book by a young scholar who knows the literature surrounding psychoanalysis as thoroughly, and as cannily, as anyone alive. Nowhere has the deep strangeness of Freud's mind and tradition been more tellingly explored. It is a marvelous contribution not only to Freud studies but to modern intellectual history as well."—Frederick Crews, University of California, Berkeley"An excellent text. Psychoanalysis in Dufresne's hands reads like a comic book concerned with horror, a thanatographical delight written not so much for adolescent boys but for philosophers . . . The proverbial stake in the heart that finally kills the undead monster is delivered by Dufresne with a gusto and verve not normally found in academic books on psychoanalysis. Dufresne is the vampire slayer of the Freud-bashers."—Gary Genosko, The Semiotic Review of Books"Dufresne is nothing if not a rigorous archaeologist, the connoisseur of delectable fragments, the shards of folly that give us clues to an entire civilization. As he dusts off each recovered piece and sets it on the shelf, he constructs not so much an argument as a gallery: an exhibition of curiosities."—Mark Shechner, The Boston Book Review"Five stars. A seminal,groundbreaking body of work . . . Tales is a highly recommended contribution to Freudian studies and would admirably serve as a model approach to evaluating and expanding other Freudian concepts throughout the coming decades."—Midwest Book Review"Dufresne's original, provocative, and scholarly work is a major intervention in current debates about the import and significance of psychoanalysis. It is a much needed blood transfusion that will cause a stir."—Rodolphe Gasché, State University of New York at Buffalo"Dufresne surveys this huge and untidy literature, but he knows better than to simply critique it. Rather than adding one more critical life-support system to the ever-proliferating body of psychoanalysis, he advocates its right to die: leave it alone, let it choke to death on its own waste, like the infusorians described by Freud in Beyond the Pleasure Principle. Dufresne reads Freud like no other, understanding full well that psychoanalysis is fundamentally immune to criticism, because it was never concerned with reality."—Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen, University of WashingtonTable of ContentsContents Borch-Jacobsen Mikkel 1. 2. 3.

    £21.59

  • Freud in the Pampas

    Stanford University Press Freud in the Pampas

    Book SynopsisThis is a fascinating history of how psychoanalysis became an essential element of contemporary Argentine culturein the media, in politics, and in daily private lives. The book reveals the unique conditions and complex historical process that made possible the diffusion, acceptance, and popularization of psychoanalysis in Argentina, which has the highest number of psychoanalysts per capita in the world. It shows why the intellectual trajectory of the psychoanalytic movement was different in Argentina than in either the United States or Europe and how Argentine culture both fostered and was shaped by its influence.The book starts with a description of the Argentine medical and intellectual establishments' reception of psychoanalysis, and the subsequent founding of the Argentine Psychoanalytic Association in 1942. It then broadens to describe the emergence of a psy culture in the 1960s, tracing its origins to a complex combination of social, economic, political, and cultural faTrade Review"This book is the first detailed study of how clinical work, literary and cultural movements, and even intellectual and political discourse [in Argentina] have been and continue to be profoundly shaped by psychoanalytic premises." -- American Historical Review"This is a marvelous book. Rich in narrative detail, sweeping in scope, and bold in interpretation, it offers a comprehensive account of one of the world's largest psychoanalytical movements. Plotkin also provides insights into Argentina's public and private cultures that are suffused from top to bottom with psychoanalytic concepts." -- Jeremy Adelman * Princeton University *"Mariano Plotkin's 2001 study, Freud in the Pampas: The Emergence and Development of a Psychoanalytic Culture in Argentina isan important and necessary book..." -- Latin American Research Review"The achievement of Freud in the Pampas is its informative account of the enormous impact that psychoanalysis has had on Argentine culture and of the profound effect that the politicized culture of Argentina has had on psychoanalysis." -- JAPATable of ContentsPreface Introduction 1. The beginnings of psychoanalysis in Argentina 2. The founding of the apa and the development of the Argentine psychoanalytic movement 3. Social change and the expansion of the psychoanalytic world 4. The diffusers' role in the expansion of the psychoanalytic realm 5. The encounter between psychoanalysis and psychiatry 6. Psychologists take the stage 7. When Marx meets Freud 8. Politics, lacanianism, and the intellectual left 9. The aftermath Notes References Index.

    £25.19

  • Against Freud

    Stanford University Press Against Freud

    Book SynopsisAgainst Freud is a highly accessible, informative, and entertaining examination of Freud's controversial ideas and legacy by the world's most knowledgeable critics of psychoanalysis.Trade Review"Todd Dufresne is the leading student of the Freud Wars of recent vintage. In his fascinating new book he assembles interviews with some of the leading Warriors, among them Frank Sulloway, Frederick Crews, and Edward Shorter. Dufresne himself is a Freud revisionist, but a judicious and learned one." -- Paul Robinson * Stanford University *"A great deal of fascinating material is presented, little known outside the ranks of specialists." -- Metapsychology"This is a fascinating work. Dufresne has taken a complex problem of great importance to contemporary culture and made it into a highly accessible volume that holds the reader's interest throughout." -- Joel Paris * McGill University *"Against Freud makes a valuable contribution to contemporary scholarship by articulating the "revisionist" reading of psychoanalysis in an easily accessible volume." -- H-GermanTable of ContentsContents Preface xxx Introduction: The Revised Life and Work of Sigmund Freud 1 1. "The Man Who Was Analyzed by Freud": Joseph Wortis on Freud, Freudians, and Social Justice 000 Interviewed by Todd Dufresne 2. An American Woman in Freud's Vienna: Esther Menaker on Freudianism and Her Analysis with Anna Freud 000 Interviewed by Todd Dufresne 3. Edward Shorter's Deflections on Medicine, History, and Psychoanalysis 000 Interviewed by Todd Dufresne 4. Psychoanalysis and Pseudoscience: Frank J. Sulloway Revisits Freud and His Legacy 000 Interviewed by Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen 5. Truth, Science, and the Failures of Psychoanalysis: Frederick Crews Reveals Why He Became a Freud Skeptic 000 Interviewed by Todd Dufresne 6. Freud and Interpretation: Frank Cioffi and Allen Esterson Discuss Freud's Legacy 000 Interviewed by Todd Dufresne 7. Schreber, Seduction, and Scholarship: Han Isra'ls on Idiots, Lunatics, and the Psychopathology of Freud Scholars 000 Interviewed by Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen and Sonu Shamdasani 8. Suggestion, Hypnosis, and the Critique of Psychoanalysis: Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen's "Return to Delboeuf" 000 Interviewed by Todd Dufresne 9. Freud, Parasites, and the "Culture of Banality": Todd Dufresne Speaks of Psychoanalysis and Contemporary Theory 000 Interviewed by Antonio Greco Suggested Readings 000 References 000 Index 000

    £17.99

  • The Psychoanalytic Movement The Cunning of

    Northwestern University Press The Psychoanalytic Movement The Cunning of

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisHow did psychoanalysis become so accepted by the public? This provocative book reconstructs the system of ideas upon which the theory and practice of psychoanalysis rests, describing a modern culture that has created a psychic or a spiritual void that psychoanalysis seems custom-made to fill.

    1 in stock

    £22.36

  • Time Driven Metapsychology and the Splitting of

    Northwestern University Press Time Driven Metapsychology and the Splitting of

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisFreud outlines two types of conflict; that between drives and reality; and that between the drives themselves. Adrian Johnston identifies a third; the conflict embedded within each and every drive..Table of ContentsForeword: A Paraliax View on Drives, by Slavoj Zizek; Preface: The Unbearable Burden of Libidinal Liberation; Introduction: The Critique of Pure Enjoymanl - or, Jouissance does not exist; Part One: Metapsychology, Temporality, and Structure; Chapter One: The Temporal Repressed in Freadian Psychoanalysis; Chapter Two: The Temporal Logic of Jacques Lacan; Chapter Three: Psychoanalysis and Modern Rationalism; Chapter Four: Kant end the Conditions of Possibility for the Psychoanalytic Subject; Part Two: The Splitting of the Drive; Chapter Five: The Fundamental Conflicts of Psychoanalysis; Chapter Six: The Unfolding of the Freudian Drive; Chapter Seven: The Lacanian Drive Topas; Chapter Eight: The Barred Trieb; Chapter Nine: The Axis of Iteration (S-P); Chapter Ten: The Axis of Alteration (A-O); Conclusion: The Uniquely Human Double Bind

    1 in stock

    £23.96

  • Cinema of Confinement

    Northwestern University Press Cinema of Confinement

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisDraws on a number of key psychoanalytic concepts from the works of Jacques Lacan, Slavoj Zizek, Joan Copjec, Michel Chion, and Todd McGowan to identify and describe a genre of cinema characterized by spatial confinement. Examining classic films, Connelly shows that the source of enjoyment of confined spaces lies in the viewer's relationship to excess.Trade ReviewIn looking at film from a Lacanian angle, Cinema of Confinement makes a strong contribution to the expanding critical literature on Lacan and cinema. The book shows exceptional knowledge of film as a language, inclusive of its unconscious underpinnings. The author moves very confidently among different filmic genres and aesthetic registers, demonstrating remarkable analytical skills. A great book with some interpretive gems." — Fabio Vighi, author of Critical Theory and Film: Rethinking Ideology through Film Noir

    1 in stock

    £74.25

  • Subject Lessons Hegel Lacan and the Future of

    Northwestern University Press Subject Lessons Hegel Lacan and the Future of

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisResponding to the ongoing objectal turn throughout contemporary humanities and social sciences, the eleven essays in Subject Lessons present a sustained case for the continued importance - indeed, the indispensability - of the category of the subject for the future of materialist thought.Trade ReviewThink of it as 'object ontology' meets 'objet a ontology.' In this volume of superb essays, the 'new materialism' associated with figures like Harman, Meillassoux, Bennett, and Bryant finds a Lacanian rejoinder well spoken for by Hegel's famous line: 'Not only as substance but also as subject!' An invaluable exchange between two major currents of contemporary theory." —Richard Boothby, author of Freud as Philosopher: Metapsychology after Lacan"A band of new materialists has come after the subject, knives drawn. In what ways do these thinkers differ from materialists past? From each other? What do they mean when they speak of materialism, of objects, or subjects? By confronting these basic questions directly, the essays in this collection cut through the babble of confused debate to offer clear accounts of the issues at stake." —Joan Copjec, author of Imagine There's No WomanTable of Contents Introduction: Hegel, Lacan, and the Future of Materialism - Russell Sbriglia and Slavoj Žižek Part I. Hegel and Philosophical Materialism 1. What 's the Matter? On Matter and Related Matters - Mladen Dolar 2. Subjectivity in Times of (New) Materialisms: Hegel and Conceptualization - Borna Radnik 3. Objects after Subjects: Hegel 's Broken Ontology - Todd McGowan 4. Elements of Dialectical Materialism in Hegel and Marx - Andrew Cole 5. Intellectual Intuition and Intellectus Archetypus: Reflexivity from Kant to Hegel - Slavoj Žižek Part II. Lacan and Psychoanalytic Materialism 6. Fear of Science: Transcendental Materialism and Its Discontents - Adrian Johnston 7. Ontology and the Death Drive: Lacan and Deleuze - Alenka Zupancic 8. Why Sex is Special: Psychoanalysis against New Materialism - Nathan Gorelick 9. Twisting "Flat Ontology": Harman 's "Allure" and Lacan 's Extimate Cause - Molly Anne Rothenberg 10. Becoming and the Challenge of Ontological Incompleteness: Virginia Woolf avec Lacan contra Deleuze - Kathryn Van Wert 11. From Sublimity to Sublimation: Hegel, Lacan, Melville - Russell Sbriglia Notes Contributors

    1 in stock

    £79.20

  • Algorithmic Desire

    Northwestern University Press Algorithmic Desire

    Book SynopsisEmphasizing the structural role of crises, gaps, and negativity as central to our experiences of reality, Flisfeder interprets the social media metaphor through a combination of dialectical, Marxist, and Lacanian frameworks to show that algorithms may indeed read our desire, but capitalism, not social media, truly makes us antisocial.

    £27.96

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