Results for 'Psychoanalysis and the arts'

976 found
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  1.  5
    In search of the good life: Emmanuel Levinas, psychoanalysis, and the art of living.Paul Marcus - 2010 - London: Karnac Books.
    Emmanuel Levinas (1906-1995), French phenomenological philosopher and Talmudic commentator, is regarded as perhaps the greatest ethical philosopher of our time. While Levinas enjoys prominence in the philosophical and scholarly community, especially in Europe, there are few if any books or articles written that take Levinas's extremely difficult to understand, if not obtuse, philosophy and apply it to the everyday lives of real people struggling to give greater meaning and purpose, especially ethical meaning, to their personal lives. This book attempts to (...)
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  2.  66
    Book review: Mari Ruti, a world of fragile things: psychoanalysis and the art of living.Geoff Boucher - 2010 - Critical Horizons 11 (2):315-321.
  3.  16
    Psychoanalysis and the act of artistic creation: a look at the unconscious dynamics of creativity.Luís Manuel Romano Delgado - 2022 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This book explores the phenomenon of creativity and creation from a psychoanalytic point of view, focusing on understanding the psycho-emotional dynamics underlying the artistic creative activities, such as theatre, literature, and painting. Throughout, Delgado considers these works of art through a Bionian, Kleinian and Freudian lens. He uses three major psychoanalytic models of the creative process, two of them classic: the first, Freudian, based on the theory of conflict between impulse and defense, the result of the effort to manage an (...)
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  4.  23
    Paul Marcus , In Search of the Good Life: Emmanuel Levinas, Psychoanalysis and the Art of Living (London: Karmac Books Ltd., 2010), ISBN: 978-1855757233. [REVIEW]George Kunz - 2010 - Foucault Studies 10:163-168.
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  5.  34
    Bacon and the Mind: Art, Neuroscience and Psychology (Francis Bacon Studies I)Francis Bacon: Painting, Philosophy, Psychoanalysis.Martin Hammer - 2021 - British Journal of Aesthetics 61 (1):111-114.
    BACON AND THE MIND: ART, NEUROSCIENCE AND PSYCHOLOGY. HarrisonMartin. Thames & Hudson. 2019. pp 160. £28.00.
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  6.  54
    Psychoanalysis and the Polis.Julia Kristeva & Margaret Waller - 1982 - Critical Inquiry 9 (1):77-92.
    The essays in this volume convince me of something which, until now was only a hypothesis of mine. Academic discourse, and perhaps American university discourse in particular, possesses an extraordinary ability to absorb, digest, and neutralize all of the key, radical or dramatic moments of thought, particularly, a fortiori, of contemporary though. Marxism in the United States, though marginalized, remains deafly dominant and exercises a fascination that we have not seen in Europe since the Russian Proletkult of the 1930s. Post-Heideggerian (...)
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  7.  15
    Spitz, Ellen Handler. Image and Insight: Essays in Psychoanalysis and The Arts.David Novitz - 1992 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 50 (4):331-331.
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  8.  27
    Paradeictic: Translation, Psychoanalysis, and the Work of Art in the Writings of Nicolas AbrahamRythmes: De L'Oeuvre, de la Traduction et de la Psychanalyse. [REVIEW]Nicholas Rand, Maria Torok & Nicolas Abraham - 1986 - Diacritics 16 (3):15.
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  9. Psychoanalysis and the realistic drama.Walter Cerf - 1958 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 16 (3):328-336.
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  10.  28
    Mari Ruti , A World of Fragile Things: Psychoanalysis and the Art of Living (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2009), ISBN: 971-438427164. [REVIEW]Marcus Schulzke - 2010 - Foucault Studies 10:186-189.
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  11.  40
    Psychoanalysis and the Marionette Theater: Interpretation Is Not Depreciation.Margret Schaefer - 1978 - Critical Inquiry 5 (1):177-188.
    At the end of his attack on my use of the psychoanalytic model for the interpretation of literature, Heller raises the question concerning what the task of the literary critic is or ought to be. His own "sketch of the Kleistean theme's historical ancestry and its later development," he says, seeks to deepen and enrich the reader's appreciation of Kleist's literary art, the artistry of his phrasing, the persuasiveness of his incidents, the conclusiveness of his examples." By implication he suggests (...)
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  12.  46
    Psychoanalysis and the Place of "Jouissance".Stephen Melville - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 13 (2):349-370.
    Psychoanalysis has, in the very nature of its object, an interest in and difficulty with the concept of place as well as an interest in and difficulty with the logic of place, topology. The Unconscious can thus seem to give rise to a certain prospect of mathesis or formalization; and such formalization, achieved, would offer a ground for the psychoanalytic claim to scientific knowledge relatively independent of empirical questions and approaching the condition of mathematics. This might then seem to (...)
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  13.  19
    Editorial: The Interface between Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience: the State of the Art.Massimo di Giannantonio, Georg Northoff & Anatolia Salone - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
  14.  31
    Psychoanalysis and Cinema: The Play of Shadows.Vicky Lebeau - 2001 - Columbia University Press.
    Lebeau examines the long and uneven history of developments in modern art, science, and technology that brought pychoanalysis and the cinema together towards the end of the nineteenth century. She explores the subsequent encounters between the two: the seductions of psychoanalysis and cinema as converging, though distinct, ways of talking about dream and desire, image and illusion, shock, and sexuality. Beginning with Freud's encounter with the spectacle of hysteria on display in fin-de-siècle Paris, this study offers a detailed reading (...)
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  15.  10
    Creation and the function of art: techné, poiesis, and the problem of aesthetics.Jason Tuckwell - 2017 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Returning to the Greek understanding of art to rethink its capacities, Creation and the Function of Art focuses on the relationship between techné and phusis (nature). Moving away from the theoretical Platonism which dominates contemporary understandings of art, this book instead reinvigorates Aristotelian causation. Beginning with the Greek topos and turning to insights from philosophy, pure mathematics, psychoanalysis and biology, Jason Tuckwell re-problematises techné in functional terms. This book examines the deviations at play within logical forms, the subject, and (...)
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  16.  11
    Art after the Untreatable: Psychoanalysis, Sexual Violence, and the Ethics of Looking in Michaela Coel’s I May Destroy You.Melissa A. Wright - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (3):53.
    This essay brings psychoanalytic theory on trauma together with film and television criticism on rape narrative in an analysis of Michael Coel’s 2020 series I May Destroy You. Beyond the limited carceral framework of the police procedural, which dislocates the act of violence from the survivor’s history and context, Coel’s polyvalent, looping narrative metabolizes rape television’s forms and genres in order to stage and restage both trauma and genre again and anew. Contesting common conceptions of vulnerability and susceptibility that prefigure (...)
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  17.  13
    For want of ambiguity: order and chaos in art, psychoanalysis, and neuroscience.Ludovica Lumer - 2019 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic, Bloomsbury Publishing. Edited by Lois Oppenheim.
    Introduction : (re) making meaning -- Shaping private demons -- A play of selves : art as play -- Narrating the self -- Mapping : the need for borders -- The fluidity of time and space in art, psychoanalysis, and neuroscience -- Resisting representation -- Conclusion : order and chaos or framing ambiguity.
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  18. Collapsing Knowledge: Art Education and the Epistemology of Psychoanalysis.Lucille Holmes - 2009 - Analysis (Australian Centre for Psychoanalysis) 15:141.
     
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  19.  12
    Psychoanalysis and cultural theory: thresholds.James Donald (ed.) - 1991 - New York: St. Martin's Press.
  20.  30
    The ability to mourn: disillusionment and the social origins of psychoanalysis.Peter Homans - 1989 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    Peter Homans offers a new understanding of the origins of psychoanalysis and relates the psychoanalytic project as a whole to the sweep of Western culture, past and present. He argues that Freud's fundamental goal was the interpretation of culture and that, therefore, psychoanalysis is fundamentally a humanistic social science. To establish this claim, Homans looks back at Freud's self-analysis in light of the crucial years from 1906 to 1914 when the psychoanalytic movement was formed and shows how these (...)
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  21.  9
    The culture-breast in psychoanalysis: cultural experiences and the clinic.Noreen Giffney - 2021 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    The Culture-Breast and Psychoanalysis focuses on the formative influence of cultural objects in our lives, and the contribution such experiences make to our mental health and overall wellbeing. Combining approaches used in clinical, academic, and arts settings, The Culture-Breast and Psychoanalysis is an essential resource for clinical practitioners of psychoanalysis, psychotherapy, counselling, psychology and psychiatry. It will also be of interest to researchers and practitioners in the fields of psychosocial studies, sociology, social work, cultural studies, and (...)
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  22.  12
    The aesthetic clinic: feminine sublimation in contemporary writing, psychoanalysis, and art.Fernanda Negrete - 2020 - Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
    Negrete brings together women writers and artists known for their formal experimentation to show that "the aesthetic experiences afforded by their work are underwritten by a tenacious and uniquely feminine ethics of desire."-- taken from back cover.
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  23.  5
    Art movements and the discourse of acknowledgements and distinctions.Themba Tsotsi - 2017 - Wilmington, Delaware, United States: Vernon Press, an imprint of Vernon Art and Science.
    This is a work of critical theory in the deconstructionist tradition. It investigates the impact and role of visual art practice in cultural dispensation. Its central argument is that conceptions of 'leadership' and of 'being a subject' (or subjugation) play a formative role in the manner with which cultural ideas are appropriated and spread out in organic interactions within the community. The arguments advanced in this work demonstrate that leadership conceptions are disseminated as 'signs' (a conceptual term for how ideas (...)
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  24.  9
    Freud and the Imaginative World.Harry Trosman - 1985 - Routledge.
    The current resurgence of interest in the scientific origins of psychoanalysis has overshadowed the artistic and literary models to which Freud had recourse time and again in the development and presentation of his theories. It is this neglected aesthetic wellspring of psychoanalysis to which Harry Trosman calls attention in _Freud and the Imaginative World_. Trosman enriches our understanding of psychoanalysis by demonstrating how Freud's cultural and humanistic commitments guided his pursuit of a science of mind. Toward this (...)
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  25.  5
    Art and the unconscious.John MacCaig Thorburn - 1925 - London,: K. Paul, Trench, Trubner & co..
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  26. Review of Feminism and Contemporary Art: The Revolutionary Power of Women's Laughter and The Emptiness of the Image: Psychoanalysis and Sexual Differences. [REVIEW]Peg Brand Weiser, Jo Anna Isaak & Parveen Adams - 1998 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 56 (3):299.
    Both books published in 1996 explore the role that gender plays in the psychology of art (dealing with both making and viewing), complicating current philosophical distinctions between the aesthetic and the cognitive, and providing new insights into basic topics in the history and psychology of perception, representation, and disinterestedness.
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  27.  24
    The Other and the Tragic Subject in Chinese Martial Arts Fiction, Viewed Through Lacan’s Schema L.Yen-Ying Lai - 2018 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 12 (1).
    This paper looks at the tragedy of Qiao Feng in Jin Yong’s The Demi-Gods and the Semi-Devils. While it is common practice for Žižekean scholars to examine genre writing and popular culture with Lacanian theory, the martial arts genre has received little attention. In Demi-Gods, Qiao Feng experiences an ‘identity crisis’ at the peak of his career: rumour has it that though he was raised and trained in China, he was born a Khitan. Qiao Feng at first believes it (...)
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  28.  80
    The Aesthetics of Freud: A Study in Psychoanalysis and Art.Jack J. Spector - 1973 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 32 (2):284-285.
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  29.  4
    The Annual of Psychoanalysis, V. 31: Psychoanalysis and History.Jerome A. Winer & James W. Anderson (eds.) - 2003 - Routledge.
    In 1958 William L. Langer, in a well-known presidential address to the American Historical Association, declared the informed use of psychoanalytic depth psychology as "the next assignment" for professional historians. _Psychoanalysis and History_, volume 31 of _The Annual of Psychoanalysis_, examines the degree to which Langer's directive has been realized in the intervening 45 years. Section I makes the case for psychobiography in the lives of historical figures and exemplifies this perspective with analytically informed studies of the art of Wassily (...)
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  30.  10
    Mirroring and Attunement: Self-Realization in Psychoanalysis and Art.Kenneth Wright - 2009 - Routledge.
    _Mirroring and Attunement_ offers a new approach to psychoanalysis, artistic creation and religion. Viewing these activities from a broadly relational perspective, Wright proposes that each provides a medium for creative dialogue: the artist discovers himself within his self-created forms, the religious person through an internal dialogue with ‘God’, and the analysand through the inter-subjective medium of the analysis. Building on the work of Winnicott, Stern and Langer, the author argues that each activity is rooted in the infant’s preverbal relationship (...)
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  31.  41
    Sublimation, art and void. An approach to Aesthetics from the articulation between Philosophy and Psychoanalysis.Ricardo Adrián González Muñoz & María del Mar Osorio Arias - 2022 - Alpha (Osorno) 54 (54):9–22.
    Resumen: El presente artículo constituye un aporte al conocimiento del arte en su vinculación con la filosofía y el psicoanálisis, en tanto aborda la tensión entre la representación y la construcción simbólica de la imagen artística en el contexto cultural/estético contemporáneo, mediante la relación entre lo Real lacaniano y la estática negativa de Adorno. Dicha relación encuentra su punto de articulación en el fenómeno estético de lo Bello, entendido como lo que encara al sujeto con el vacío de su deseo (...)
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  32.  9
    Literature, Art and the Pursuit of Decay in Twentieth-Century France.Timothy Mathews - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    In Literature, Art and the Pursuit of Decay, Timothy Mathews examines work by a range of writers and painters working in France in the twentieth century. The well-illustrated book engages with canonical figures - Guillaume Apollinaire, Marguerite Duras and Jean Genet, Roland Barthes, Pablo Picasso and René Magritte - as well as more neglected individuals including Robert Desnos and Jean Fautrier. Mathews draws on psychoanalysis, existentialism and poststructuralism to show how both literature and fine art promote the value of (...)
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  33.  21
    The Poetics of Psychoanalysis: In the Wake of Klein.Mary Jacobus - 2005 - Oxford University Press.
    The Poetics of Psychoanalysis explores the literary aspects of the twentieth-century psychoanalytic tradition that has come to be known as British Object Relations psychoanalysis. It focuses on the writing of Klein, Sharpe, Riviere, Isaacs, Winnicott, Milner, and Bion. Giving a central place to literary and aesthetic concerns, it makes connections with particular works of literature and art. The Poetics of Psychoanalysis is aimed at literary readers, but will also be of interest to psychoanalytic practitioners.
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  34.  18
    Art and Psyche, a Study in Psychoanalysis and Aesthetics.Jack J. Spector - 1986 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 45 (1):91-94.
    Many forays have been made by psychoanalysts into the aesthetic realm, particularly in the form of interpretations of works of art and discussions of the particular or general pathology that may predispose individuals toward artistic creativity. Likewise, occasional philosophers have commented on the usefulness of psychoanalysis as a way of approaching areas of mutual interest. This study aims to contribute to this ongoing interdisciplinary dialogue, primarily through a focus on pathography, the term and method originated by Freud in his (...)
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  35.  64
    Mild intoxication and other aesthetic feelings: psychoanalysis and art revisited.Susan Best - 2005 - Angelaki 10 (3):157 – 170.
    The enjoyment of beauty has a peculiar, mildly intoxicating quality of feeling The science of aesthetics investigates the conditions under which things are felt as beautiful, but it has been unable to give any explanation of the nature and origin of beauty Psychoanalysis, unfortunately, has scarcely anything to say about beauty either.1 Freud.
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  36.  84
    Art as Symptom: Žižek and the Ethics of Psychoanalytic Criticism.Tim Dean - 2002 - Diacritics 32 (2):21-41.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Art as Symptom:Žižek and the Ethics of Psychoanalytic CriticismTim Dean (bio)This paper tackles a problem that is exemplified by, but not restricted to, Slavoj Žižek's work: the tendency to treat aesthetic artifacts as symptoms of the culture in which they were produced. Whether or not one employs the vocabulary and methods of psychoanalysis to do so, this approach to aesthetics has become so widespread in the humanities that (...)
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  37. Psychoanalysis: Science, Literature or Art? in Style, Politics and the Future of Philosophy.A. Janik - 1989 - Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 114:190-196.
  38.  37
    Masculinity, Scatology, Mooning and the Queer/able Art of Gilbert & George: On the Visual Discourse of Male Ejaculation and Anal Penetration.Cüneyt Çakirlar - 2011 - Paragraph 34 (1):86-104.
    The aim of this essay is to investigate the intersections between masculinity, shame, art, anality, the abject and embodiment by focusing on a particular period of the British art duo Gilbert & George's work in the 1990s. In their series The Naked Shit Pictures, The Fundamental Pictures and The Rudimentary Pictures, the duo's artistic self-performance opens a scatological narrative territory where the male body encounters its own abject fluids strategically magnified. Situating itself within the boundary between queer theory and Lacanian (...)
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  39.  41
    Psychoanalysis and Literary ProcessGreat Expectations, Moby-DickThe Hieroglyphics of a New Speech, Cubism, Stieglitz, and the Early Poetry of William Carlos Williams.Van Meter Ames, Frederick Crews, James Joyce, Walter Pater & Bram Dijkstra - 1970 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 29 (2):282.
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  40.  9
    The moving eye: film, television, architecture, visual art, and the modern.Edward Dimendberg (ed.) - 2019 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    Once the province of film and media scholars, today the moving image is of broad concern to historians of art and architecture and designers of everything from websites to cities. As museums and galleries devote increasing space to video installations which no longer presuppose a fixed viewer, urban space becomes envisioned and planned through "fly throughs," and technologies such as GPS add data to the experience of travel, moving images have captured the attention of geographers and scholars across the humanities (...)
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  41.  12
    Transfixed by prehistory: an inquiry into the art and times of moderns.Maria Stavrinaki - 2022 - New York: Zone Books. Edited by Jane Marie Todd & Maria Stavrinaki.
    Prehistory is an invention of the later nineteenth century. It was in this moment of technological progress and the acceleration of production and circulation, that three major Western narratives about time took shape. One after another, these new fields of inquiry delved into the obscure immensity of the past: first, to reckon the age of the Earth; second, to find a point of emergence of human beings; and third, to ponder the age of art. Maria Stavrinaki's Transfixed by Prehistory considers (...)
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  42.  12
    Differencing the Canon: Feminist Desire and the Writing of Art's Histories.Griselda Pollock - 1999 - Psychology Press.
    In this major book, Griselda Pollock engages boldly in the culture wars over `what is the canon?` and `what difference can feminism make?` Do we simply reject the all-male line-up and satisfy our need for ideal egos with an all women litany of artistic heroines? Or is the question a chance to resist the phallocentric binary and allow the ambiguities and complexities of desire - subjectivity and sexuality - to shape the readings of art that constantly displace the present gender (...)
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  43.  34
    The Sense and Non-Sense of Revolt: The Powers and Limits of Psychoanalysis.Julia Kristeva - 2000 - Columbia University Press.
    Linguist, psychoanalyst, and cultural theorist, Julia Kristeva is one of the most influential and prolific thinkers of our time. Her writings have broken new ground in the study of the self, the mind, and the ways in which we communicate through language. Her work is unique in that it skillfully brings together psychoanalytic theory and clinical practice, literature, linguistics, and philosophy. In her latest book on the powers and limits of psychoanalysis, Kristeva focuses on an intriguing new dilemma. Freud (...)
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  44.  6
    The Business of Being Made: The Temporalities of Reproductive Technologies, in Psychoanalysis and Culture.Katie Gentile (ed.) - 2015 - Routledge.
    _The Business of Being Made_ is the first book to critically analyze assisted reproductive technologies from a transdisciplinary perspective integrating psychoanalytic and cultural theories. It is a ground-breaking collection exploring ARTs through diverse methods including interview research, clinical case studies, psychoanalytic based ethnography, and memoir. Gathering clinicians and researchers who specialize in this area, this book engages current research in psychoanalysis, sociology, anthropology, philosophy and debates in feminist, queer and cultural theory about affect, temporality, and bodies. With (...) as its fulcrum, _The Business of Being Made_ explores the social constructions and personal experiences of ARTs. Katie Gentile frames the cultural context, exploring the ways ARTs have become a complex form of playing with time, attempting to manufacture a hopeful future in the midst of growing global uncertainty. The contributors then present a range of varied experiences related to ARTs, including: Interviews with women and men undergoing ARTs; A psychoanalytic memoir of male infertility; Clinical research and work with transgender, gay and lesbian patients creating new Oedipal constellations, the experiences of LBGTQ people within the medical system and the variety of families that emerge; Research on the experiences of egg donors and a corresponding clinical case study of successful egg donation; The experiences of ongoing failure which is the often unacknowledged for ART procedures; How and when people choose to stop using ARTs; A psychoanalytic ethnography of a neonatal intensive care unit populated in part with the babies created through these technologies and their parents, haggard and in shock after years of failed attempts. Full of original material, _The Business of Being Made_ conveys the ambivalence of these technologies without simplifying their complicated consequences for the bodies of individuals, the family, cultures, and our planet. This book will be relevant to clinicians, medical and psychological personnel working in assisted reproductive technologies and infertility, as well as academics working in the fields of sociology, literature, queer and feminist theories and at the intersections of cultural, critical and psychoanalytic theories. (shrink)
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  45.  32
    The Sense and Non-Sense of Revolt: The Powers and Limits of Psychoanalysis.Jeanine Herman (ed.) - 2000 - Cambridge University Press.
    Linguist, psychoanalyst, and cultural theorist, Julia Kristeva is one of the most influential and prolific thinkers of our time. Her writings have broken new ground in the study of the self, the mind, and the ways in which we communicate through language. Her work is unique in that it skillfully brings together psychoanalytic theory and clinical practice, literature, linguistics, and philosophy. In her latest book on the powers and limits of psychoanalysis, Kristeva focuses on an intriguing new dilemma. Freud (...)
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  46.  14
    Nourishing the Inner Life of Clinicians and Humanitarians: The Ethical Turn in Psychoanalysis.Donna M. Orange - 2015 - Routledge.
    Nourishing the Inner Life of Clinicians and Humanitarians: The Ethical Turn in Psychoanalysis, demonstrates the demanding, clinical and humanitarian work that psychotherapists often undertake with fragile and devastated people, those degraded by violence and discrimination. In spite of this, Donna M. Orange argues that there is more to human nature than a relentlessly negative view. Drawing on psychoanalytic and philosophical resources, as well as stories from history and literature, she explores ethical narratives that ground hope in human goodness and (...)
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  47.  10
    (1 other version)Freud and the Passions.John O'Neill (ed.) - 1996 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    John O'Neill explores the human passions as both the object of psychoanalysis and the creative principle of Freud's own discovery and practice of psychoanalysis. Love, hate, anger, jealousy, envy, knowledge, and ignorance: the passions dominate infancy, adolescence, and adulthood, marking them with narcissism, murder, seduction, and self-destruction. They are both the soul's theater and the soul of theater, art, literature, and music. If fear, hate, envy, and jealousy rival love, beauty, and knowledge, or turn into one another, they (...)
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  48.  39
    Head Cases: Julia Kristeva on Philosophy and Art in Depressed Times.Elaine Miller - 2014 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    While philosophy and psychoanalysis privilege language and conceptual distinctions and mistrust the image, the philosopher and psychoanalyst Julia Kristeva recognizes the power of art and the imagination to unblock important sources of meaning. She also appreciates the process through which creative acts counteract and transform feelings of violence and depression. Reviewing Kristeva's corpus, Elaine P. Miller considers the intellectual's "aesthetic idea" and "thought specular" in their capacity to reshape depressive thought on both the individual and cultural level. She revisits (...)
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  49.  10
    Shame and Sexuality: Psychoanalysis and Visual Culture.Claire Pajaczkowska & Ivan Ward (eds.) - 2008 - Routledge.
    Why do human beings feel shame? What is the cultural dimension of shame and sexuality? Can theory understand the power of affect? How is psychoanalysis integral to cultural theory? The experience of shame is a profound, painful and universal emotion with lasting effects on many aspects of public life and human culture. Rooted in childhood experience, linked to sexuality and the cultural norms which regulate the body and its pleasures, shame is uniquely human. _Shame and Sexuality _explores elements of (...)
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  50.  6
    The Problem of Truth in Applied Psychoanalysis.Charles Hanly - 1992 - New York: Guilford Press.
    Addressing such issues as the claims of critics that the application of psychoanalysis to literature, philosophy, the arts, and history results in interpretations that are speculative, externally imposed, reductionistic, and subjective, Hanly (philosophy, U. of Toronto; training analyst, Toronto Psychoanalytic Institute) searches for objectivity in the epistemological foundations and methods of applied psychoanalysis. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
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