Description

Book Synopsis
Rethinking the Relation between Women and Psychoanalysis: Loss, Mourning, and the Feminine uses contemporary psychoanalytic views to resituate women as desiring subjects within the psychoanalytic narrative. Contributors to this edited collection explore the various configurations of mourning, pain, regret, and grieving in diverse societies and cultures in order to reconstruct the role of women in modern psychoanalysis. They raise questions about the status of women in culture and society and contend with themes that psychoanalysts have associated with women since the late nineteenth century, such as loss and mourning, femininity and motherhood, and desire and sexuality. This book is recommended for students and scholars of psychology, gender studies, cultural studies, literature, and philosophy.

Trade Review

Editor and contributing author Escalante (Univ. of Monterrey, Mexico) has organized this collection around the themes of subjectivity, the feminine, loss, violence, and mourning, to include essays by herself and seven other psychoanalysts of international background and experience, from Delhi to Paris, with some contributions from others within her local institution. Each essay takes a different arresting angle, addressing a range of proposals, such as, what does psychoanalysis owe to women, freed from phallocentricity; what is the relation between woman's abjection and her community role in death; what happens to femininity after a woman gives birth and becomes a mother. . . The overall aim of the volume is to support the female subjective voice. There are clinical vignettes aplenty. Many references to Freud, Lacan, Laplanche, and Bion are found, and Kristeva is aptly represented. . . the originality of the ideas is stimulating and thought provoking. Although this book is not for lay readers, the text warrants close study and will enrich mainly graduate students and others who either study or seek to apply psychoanalysis in their own practice. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students through faculty; professionals.

* Choice *
Rethinking the Relation between Women and Psychoanalysis shows the fundamental complexity of the relationship between loss, mourning, grief, and femininity. It is an indispensable tool in order to think about a womaen’s position nowadays. Editor Hada Soria Escalante and the contributors have made an extraordinary work. It This book brings variety and innovation to the subject of loss and femininity that is very useful, especially for those who are interested in the clinical practice and the investigation of the contemporary psychoanalysis. -- Adriana Bauab, Freudian School of Buenos Aires
The contributors to Rethinking the Relation between Women and Psychoanalysis have abelong to diverse cultural belonginges, and their different orientations offer an interesting contrast toin the study of mourning. The study of mourning is very important in a global social context that tends to deny the lack or to ‘correct’ it with merchandises. -- Araceli Colín, Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro

Table of Contents
Chapter 1: On Mourning's End: Sacrificial Feminine Positions And Their Intolerable Revelation Before The Death Of The Father

Hada Soria Escalante



Chapter 2: Phantoms of Foreclosed Mourning

Marilyn Charles



Chapter 3: Devil! Sing Me The Blues… Story of a Life Struggling to be Born

Shalini Masih



Chapter 4: Killing Death With Silence: Women in the Colombian Post-Agreement Era

Angélica Toro Cardona



Chapter 5: On the Construction of Maternity

Paola J. González Castro



Chapter 6: The Sanguinary Dimension of Jealousy: Pain, Grief, and Unbending Certainty

Mario Orozco Guzmán



Chapter 7: Grief, Rêve and Son-Au-Dela

Carolina Koretzky



Chapter 8: On the Unconscious as Faith in Hidden Meaning at the Twilight of Analysis

David Hafner

Rethinking the Relation between Women and

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    A Paperback / softback by Hada Soria Escalante, Angélica Toro Cardona, Paola J. González Castro

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      View other formats and editions of Rethinking the Relation between Women and by Hada Soria Escalante

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 31/12/2021
      ISBN13: 9781793605818, 978-1793605818
      ISBN10: 1793605815

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Rethinking the Relation between Women and Psychoanalysis: Loss, Mourning, and the Feminine uses contemporary psychoanalytic views to resituate women as desiring subjects within the psychoanalytic narrative. Contributors to this edited collection explore the various configurations of mourning, pain, regret, and grieving in diverse societies and cultures in order to reconstruct the role of women in modern psychoanalysis. They raise questions about the status of women in culture and society and contend with themes that psychoanalysts have associated with women since the late nineteenth century, such as loss and mourning, femininity and motherhood, and desire and sexuality. This book is recommended for students and scholars of psychology, gender studies, cultural studies, literature, and philosophy.

      Trade Review

      Editor and contributing author Escalante (Univ. of Monterrey, Mexico) has organized this collection around the themes of subjectivity, the feminine, loss, violence, and mourning, to include essays by herself and seven other psychoanalysts of international background and experience, from Delhi to Paris, with some contributions from others within her local institution. Each essay takes a different arresting angle, addressing a range of proposals, such as, what does psychoanalysis owe to women, freed from phallocentricity; what is the relation between woman's abjection and her community role in death; what happens to femininity after a woman gives birth and becomes a mother. . . The overall aim of the volume is to support the female subjective voice. There are clinical vignettes aplenty. Many references to Freud, Lacan, Laplanche, and Bion are found, and Kristeva is aptly represented. . . the originality of the ideas is stimulating and thought provoking. Although this book is not for lay readers, the text warrants close study and will enrich mainly graduate students and others who either study or seek to apply psychoanalysis in their own practice. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students through faculty; professionals.

      * Choice *
      Rethinking the Relation between Women and Psychoanalysis shows the fundamental complexity of the relationship between loss, mourning, grief, and femininity. It is an indispensable tool in order to think about a womaen’s position nowadays. Editor Hada Soria Escalante and the contributors have made an extraordinary work. It This book brings variety and innovation to the subject of loss and femininity that is very useful, especially for those who are interested in the clinical practice and the investigation of the contemporary psychoanalysis. -- Adriana Bauab, Freudian School of Buenos Aires
      The contributors to Rethinking the Relation between Women and Psychoanalysis have abelong to diverse cultural belonginges, and their different orientations offer an interesting contrast toin the study of mourning. The study of mourning is very important in a global social context that tends to deny the lack or to ‘correct’ it with merchandises. -- Araceli Colín, Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1: On Mourning's End: Sacrificial Feminine Positions And Their Intolerable Revelation Before The Death Of The Father

      Hada Soria Escalante



      Chapter 2: Phantoms of Foreclosed Mourning

      Marilyn Charles



      Chapter 3: Devil! Sing Me The Blues… Story of a Life Struggling to be Born

      Shalini Masih



      Chapter 4: Killing Death With Silence: Women in the Colombian Post-Agreement Era

      Angélica Toro Cardona



      Chapter 5: On the Construction of Maternity

      Paola J. González Castro



      Chapter 6: The Sanguinary Dimension of Jealousy: Pain, Grief, and Unbending Certainty

      Mario Orozco Guzmán



      Chapter 7: Grief, Rêve and Son-Au-Dela

      Carolina Koretzky



      Chapter 8: On the Unconscious as Faith in Hidden Meaning at the Twilight of Analysis

      David Hafner

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