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Lacan on Madness: Madness, yes you can't

โœ Scribed by Patricia Gherovici (editor)


Publisher
Routledge
Year
2015
Tongue
English
Leaves
198
Edition
1
Category
Library

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โœฆ Synopsis


This new collection of essays by distinguished international scholars and clinicians will revolutionize your understanding of madness. Essential for those on both sides of the couch eager to make sense of the plethora of theories about madness available today, Lacan on Madness: Madness, Yes You Canโ€™t provides compelling and original perspectives following the work of Jacques Lacan.

Patricia Gherovici and Manya Steinkoler suggest new ways of working with phenomena often considered impermeable to clinical intervention or discarded as meaningless. This book offers a fresh view on a wide variety of manifestations and presentations of madness, featuring clinical case studies, new theoretical developments in psychosis, and critical appraisal of artistic expressions of insanity.

Lacan on Madness uncovers the logics of insanity while opening new possibilities of treatment and cure. Intervening in current debates about normalcy and pathology, causation and prognosis, the authors propose effective modalities of treatment, and challenge popular ideas of what constitutes a cure offering a reassessment of the positive and creative potential of madness. Gherovici and Steinkolerโ€™s book makes Lacanian ideas accessible by showing how they are both clinically and critically useful. It is invaluable reading for psychoanalysts, clinicians, academics, graduate students, and lay persons.

โœฆ Table of Contents


Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Notes on contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
PART 1 Madness manifest: encountering madness
1 The case of the baby diaper man
2 Ilse or the law of the mother
3 From psychotic illness to psychotic existence: on re-inventing the institution
4 On the suicide bomber: anatomy of a political fantasy
5 Todayโ€™s madness does not make sense
PART II The method in madness: thinking psychosis
6 โ€œYou cannot choose to go crazyโ€
7 Treatment of the psychoses and contemporary psychoanalysis
8 Psychotic transference
9 The specificity of manic-depressive psychosis
10 Melancholia and the unabandoned object
11 Madness, subjectivity, and the mirror stage: Lacan and Merleau-Ponty
12 Narcissistic neurosis and non-sexual trauma
13 Sheโ€™s raving mad: the hysteric, the woman, and the psychoanalyst
PART III Madness and creation: environs of the hole
14 The open ego: Woolf, Joyce and the โ€œmadโ€ subject
15 Normality and segregation in Primo Leviโ€™s Sleeping Beauty in the Fridge
16 Spell it wrong to read it right: Crashaw, psychosis, and Baroque poetics
17 Madness or mimesis: narrative impasse in the novels of Samuel Beckett
18 Reading mayhem: schizophrenic writing and the engine of madness
Index

โœฆ Subjects


Psychoanalysis


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