This is a timely and stimulating collection of essays on the importance of Freudian thought for analytic philosophy, investigating its impact on mind, ethics, sexuality, religion and epistemology.Marking a clear departure from the long-standing debate over whether Freudian thought is scientific or n
Rereading Freud: Psychoanalysis Through Philosophy
β Scribed by Jon Mills
- Publisher
- State University of New York Press
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 241
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Continental philosophers examine Freud's metapsychology.
β¦ Table of Contents
REREADING FREUD......Page 4
CONTENTS......Page 8
PREFACE......Page 10
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS......Page 16
1. THE LOGIC AND ILLOGIC OF THE DREAM-WORK by JOHN SALLIS......Page 18
2. FREUDβS DREAM THEORY AND SOCIAL CONSTRUCTIVISM by TOM ROCKMORE......Page 34
3. THE BODILY UNCONSCIOUS IN FREUDβS βTHREE ESSAYSβ by JOHN RUSSON......Page 52
4. THE EGO DOES NOT RESEMBLE THE CADAVER: IMAGE AND SELF IN FREUD by STEPHEN DAVID ROSS......Page 68
5. THE βALCHEMY OF IDENTIFICATIONβ: NARCISSISM, MELANCHOLIA, FEMININITY by EMILY ZAKIN......Page 94
6. THE ONTOLOGY OF DENIAL by WILFRIED VER EECKE......Page 120
7. THE I AND THE IT by JON MILLS......Page 144
8. TEMPORALITY AND THE THERAPEUTIC SUBJECT: THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF TRANSFERENCE, REMEMBERING, AND WORKING-THROUGH by MARIA TALERO......Page 182
9. FREUD AND KIERKEGAARD ON GENOCIDE AND THE DEATH DRIVE by BRUCE WILSHIRE......Page 198
10. THE UNCONSCIOUS LIFE OF RACE: FREUDIAN RESOURCES FOR CRITICAL RACE THEORY by SHANNON SULLIVAN......Page 212
ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS......Page 236
H......Page 240
W......Page 241
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This is a timely and stimulating collection of essays on the importance of Freudian thought for analytic philosophy, investigating its impact on mind, ethics, sexuality, religion and epistemology.Marking a clear departure from the long-standing debate over whether Freudian thought is scientific or n
Psychoanalysis has transformed our culture. We constantly use and refer to ideas from psychoanalysis, often unconsciously. Psychology, philosophy, politics, sociology, women's studies, anthropology, literary studies, cultural studies, and other disciplines have been permeated by the competing school
The Freud Wars offers a comprehensive introduction to the crucial question of the justification of psychoanalysis. Part I examines three powerful critiques of psychoanalysis in the context of a recent controversy about its nature and legitimacy: is it a bankrupt science, an innovative science, or n