<p><em>Memories and Monsters </em>explores the nature of the monstrous or uncanny, and the way psychological trauma relates to memory and narration. This interdisciplinary book works on the borderland between psychology and philosophy, drawing from scholars in both fields who have helped mould the b
Memories and Monsters: Psychology, Trauma, and Narrative
β Scribed by Eric R. Severson (editor), David M. Goodman (editor)
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 312
- Series
- Relational Perspectives Book Series
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Memories and Monsters explores the nature of the monstrous or uncanny, and the way psychological trauma relates to memory and narration. This interdisciplinary book works on the borderland between psychology and philosophy, drawing from scholars in both fields who have helped mould the bourgeoning field of relational psychoanalysis and phenomenological and existential psychology. The editors have sought out contributions to this field that speak to the pressing question: how are we to attend to and contend with our monsters?
The authors in this volume examine the ways in which we might best relate to our monsters, and how the legacies of ancient traumas and anxieties continue to affect our current stories, memories and everyday practices. Covering such manifestations of the monstrous as racism, crimes against humanity, trauma as portrayed in music and art, and the Holocaust, this book explores the impact the uncanny has on our individual and collective psyches.
By focusing on a very specific theme, and one that excites the imagination, Memories and Monsters stokes the flames of an important current movement in relational psychoanalysis. It will appeal to psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists, as well as professionals in psychology and graduate school students and tutors in the fields of both psychology and philosophy.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
List of contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction: listening to monsters
1 Apocalyptic exceptionalism and existential particularity: the rise in popularity of dystopian myths and our immortal βotherβ
2 The Golem must live, the Golem must die: on the moral imperative of writing critical cultural histories of psychology
3 The Golem and the decline of language and magicβor, why our machines disappoint
4 Is loyalty really a virtue? Shame and the monstrous Other
5 Toward a psychoanalysis of passion
6 Living in the shadows of the past: German memory, trauma, and legacies of perpetration
7 Haunting and historicity
8 Changing societal narratives, fighting βcrimes against humanityβ
9 Positioning self and other: how psychiatric patients, psychiatric inmates, and mental health care professionals construct discursively their relationship to total institutions
10 βI am not myself, but I am not an otherβ: self-dissolution narrative in medical rehabilitation psychotherapy
11 The idealized βotherβ: a reparative fiction
12 Foucault and Derrida on interiority and the limits of psychoanalyzing sexuality and madness
13 Beautiful troubling alterity: an intersubjective response to Nabokovβs Lolita
14 The music knows: grieving existential trauma in art, music, and psychoanalysis
Index
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