
Art and Psychoanalysis.
Title:
Art and Psychoanalysis.
Author:
Walsh, Maria.
ISBN:
9780857721839
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (176 pages)
Contents:
Title page -- Copyright page -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 Distortion and Disguise: The Dream-Work -- Chapter 2 Uncanny Eruptions -- Chapter 3 Refashioning Fetishism and Masquerade -- Chapter 4 Female Fetishism in the Expanded Field of Narcissism -- Chapter 5 Eye and Gaze: Restoring Body to Vision -- Chapter 6 The Evolution of Abjection -- Chapter 7 Black Narcissus -- Chapter 8 Repetition and the Death Drive -- Chapter 9 Returning to Melanie Klein -- Chapter 10 'Real-Making': A Transitional Phenomenon -- Chapter 11 New Skins for Old -- Afterword -- Notes -- Select Bibliography.
Abstract:
Often derided as unscientific and self-indulgent, psychoanalysis has been an invaluable resource for artists, art critics and historians throughout the twentieth century. Art and Psychoanalysis investigates these encounters. _x000D_ The shared relationship to the unconscious, severed from Romantic inspiration by Freud, is traced from the Surrealist engagement with psychoanalytic imagery to the contemporary critic's use of psychoanalytic concepts as tools to understand how meaning operates. Following the theme of the 'object' with its varying materiality, Walsh develops her argument that psychoanalysis, like art, is a cultural discourse about the mind in which the authority of discourse itself can be undermined, provoking ambiguity and uncertainty and destabilising identity. _x000D_ The dynamics of the dream-work, Freud's 'familiar unfamiliar', fetishism, visual mastery, abjection, repetition, and the death drive are explored through detailed analysis of artists ranging from Max Ernst to Louise Bourgeois, including 1980s postmodernists such as Jeff Koons, appropriation artists such as Barbara Kruger and post-minimalist sculpture._x000D_ Innovative and disturbing, Art and Psychoanalysis investigates key psychoanalytic concepts to reveal a dynamic relationship between art and psychoanalysis which goes far beyond interpretation. There is no cure for the artist - but art can reconcile us to the traumatic nature of human experience, converting the sadistic impulses of the ego towards domination and war into a masochistic ethics of responsibility and desire. _x000D_.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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