One hundred years after the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute was established, this book recovers the cultural and intellectual history connected to this vibrant organization and places it alongside the London Bloomsbury group, the Paris Surrealist circle, and the Viennese fin-de-si?cle as a crucial c
Islamic Psychoanalysis and Psychoanalytic Islam: Cultural and Clinical Dialogues
✍ Scribed by Ian Parker (editor), Sabah Siddiqui (editor)
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 191
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This pioneering volume brings together scholars and clinicians working at the intersection of Islam and psychoanalysis to explore both the connections that link these two traditions, as well as the tensions that exist between them.
Uniting authors from a diverse range of traditions and perspectives, including Freudian, Jungian, Lacanian, Object-Relations, and Group-Analytic, the book creates a dialogue through which several key questions can be addressed. How can Islam be rendered amenable to psychoanalytic interpretation? What might an ‘Islamic psychoanalysis’ look like that accompanies and questions the forms of psychoanalysis that developed in the West? And what might a ‘psychoanalytic Islam’ look like that speaks for, and perhaps even transforms, the forms of truth that Islam produces?
In an era of increasing Islamophobia in the West, this important book identifies areas where clinical practice can be informed by a deeper understanding of contemporary Islam, as well as what it means to be a Muslim today. It will appeal to trainees and practitioners of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy, as well as scholars interested in religion and Islamic studies.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Foreword
List of contributors
Introduction
References
1. ‘The unity in human sufferings’: cultural translatability in the context of Arab psychoanalytic cultural critiqueh
‘All of its culture became Salafist’: Arab psychoanalytic cultural
critique post-1967
Between identity and difference: conceptualising cultural translatability
‘The unity in human sufferings’: the cultural translatability of
psychoanalysis and the Arabo-Islamicate, part 1
The politics of difference: the cultural translatability of psychoanalysis and the Arabo-Islamicate, part 2
Notes
References
2. Islam: a manifest or latent content?
Freud and secularization
Constructing Islam from the standpoint of the West
Psychoanalysis in Iran
Conclusions
Acknowledgments
References
3. Representations of the psyche and its dynamics in Islam: the work of Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyah
Monotheistic religions and the contribution of Islam to psychoanalysis
Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyah
The Islamic psyche
Matters of the heart
Islam and the Western unconscious
References
4. Politics of secular psychoanalysis in India: Hindu-Muslim as religious and political identities in Sudhir Kakar’s writing
Indian-ness: primarily majority
Ontology of a riot: Hindu-Muslim relations in psychoanalysis in India
Muslims: fundamentally religious
Politics of secular: Indian identity
Conclusion
References
5. Between neutrality and disavowal: being Muslim psychotherapists in India
Making a mistake: a case illustration
Between subject and object
Why neutrality? Why not disavowal?
Who sits in the chair of the analyst?
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
Notes
References
6. The repressed event of (Shi’i) Islam: psychoanalysis, the trauma of Iranian Shi’ism, and feminine revolt
The originary trauma of Shi’ism: a Freudian reading
The Persian Oedipus: an Iranian Oedipal theory
The feminine revolt: Qurrat al-‘Ayn unveiling vision and voice
Conclusion
Notes
References
7. Becoming revolution: from symptom to act in the 2011 Arab revolts
What is to be done?
The revolutionary anti-ideal
An opening, an interval
Within and against Islam: a negative affirmation
Notes
References
8. Decolonizing psychoanalysis/psychoanalyzing Islamophobia
Islamic reformation
The one and the many
Radical psychoanalysis/Islamic humanism
Three substitutional metaphors
The four five discourses
The discourse of the analyst
Decolonizing Žižek
Liberation
Note
References
9. Connectedness and dreams: exploring the possibilities of communication across interpretive traditions
Extensions of psychoanalysis
Islam/psychoanalysis; side by side
Dreams and connections in Cairo
Notes
References
10. Islam, the new modern erotic
Jihadism
Untranslatability
The fetish object
The Surmusulman
Trump
Saying the unsayable
Acknowledgements
Note
References
11. Enduring trouble: striving to think anew
Towards understanding belief systems
Need, desire, fantasy
Notes
References
Index
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