Description

Book Synopsis
Examines why the use of Freudian concepts for the interpretation of literary and artistic works plays such an important role in demonstrating the contemporary relevance of psychoanalytic concepts.

Trade Review
'One of today's foremost French philosophers offers here a fascinating and illuminating take on the relevance of Freudian concepts and psychoanalytic interpretations, as emerging from the yet to be discovered meaning of the 19th century aesthetic revolution. In a philosophical dialogue with Lyotard, Ranciere contends that the Freudian inheritance that valorizes pathos over logos, goes against the grain of Freud's own effort to maintain their equal coexistence and inseparability: to preserve at once the pathos of the sickness and the logos of the cure. This erudite and brilliant book is a must-read for students of art, philosophy and psychoanalysis alike.'
Shoshana Felman, Author of Testimony (Crises of Witnessing), and The Juridical Unconscious

"Ranciere offers a fascinating new optic through which to read psychoanalysis, and his original positioning of Freud in relation to art and literature is valuable in a field where partisan defences and blanket dismissals tend to hold sway."
The Philosophers' Magazine



Table of Contents

A Defective Subject

The Aesthetic Revolution

The Two Forms of Mute Speech

From One Unconscious to Another

Freud’s Corrections

On Various Uses of Details

A Conflict between Two Kinds of Medicine

The Aesthetic Unconscious

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A Hardback by Jacques Rancière

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    View other formats and editions of The Aesthetic Unconscious by Jacques Rancière

    Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
    Publication Date: 18/12/2009
    ISBN13: 9780745646435, 978-0745646435
    ISBN10: 0745646433

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Examines why the use of Freudian concepts for the interpretation of literary and artistic works plays such an important role in demonstrating the contemporary relevance of psychoanalytic concepts.

    Trade Review
    'One of today's foremost French philosophers offers here a fascinating and illuminating take on the relevance of Freudian concepts and psychoanalytic interpretations, as emerging from the yet to be discovered meaning of the 19th century aesthetic revolution. In a philosophical dialogue with Lyotard, Ranciere contends that the Freudian inheritance that valorizes pathos over logos, goes against the grain of Freud's own effort to maintain their equal coexistence and inseparability: to preserve at once the pathos of the sickness and the logos of the cure. This erudite and brilliant book is a must-read for students of art, philosophy and psychoanalysis alike.'
    Shoshana Felman, Author of Testimony (Crises of Witnessing), and The Juridical Unconscious

    "Ranciere offers a fascinating new optic through which to read psychoanalysis, and his original positioning of Freud in relation to art and literature is valuable in a field where partisan defences and blanket dismissals tend to hold sway."
    The Philosophers' Magazine



    Table of Contents

    A Defective Subject

    The Aesthetic Revolution

    The Two Forms of Mute Speech

    From One Unconscious to Another

    Freud’s Corrections

    On Various Uses of Details

    A Conflict between Two Kinds of Medicine

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