Loving Psychoanalysis: Looking at Culture with Freud and Lacan

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Karnac, 2006 M01 1 - 238 páginas

Psychoanalysis was neither a product of philosophy nor of academic study. Freud took his lead from hysterical women; the accounts of their pain, anxieties and physical symptoms led him to formulate his theories on the existence of the unconscious. Psychoanalysis is neither a theory nor a way of seeing life. It is a form of ethics unlike any other, it is the subjects way of relating to the world. However, there is no doubt that it owes its existence to science. It could perhaps be termed the science of the particular, because it deals with the unique truth of the subject. Lacan, in contrast to the theoreticians who aspired towards universality, similarly described psychoanalysis as the approximate science of the subject. This book is a kind of mosaic, composed of both beginning and concluding acts. It is an anthology of essays and lectures of recent years, which comprise an attempt to organize and pass on what can be learned from various psychoanalytical viewpoints from various cultural disciplines, particularly ones that reflect the discontent that is inherent within them.

Acerca del autor (2006)

Ruth Golan is a clinical psychologist, psychoanalyst and a poet. She lives, works and teaches in Tel-Aviv, and is a member of the GIEP (the Israeli Group of the New Lacanian School). She is also a founding member of the IEF.

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