Cover image for Who Owns Psychoanalysis?.
Who Owns Psychoanalysis?.
Title:
Who Owns Psychoanalysis?.
Author:
Casement, Ann.
ISBN:
9781849404242
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (416 pages)
Contents:
COVER -- EDITOR AND CONTRIBUTORS -- INTRODUCTION -- PART I: ACADEMIC -- CHAPTER ONE: Pathways for psychoanalysis -- CHAPTER TWO: What is psychoanalysis? -- CHAPTER THREE: Reflections on psychic ownership andpsychoanalytic studies -- CHAPTER FOUR: From insight to self-begetting: On the post-modern vicissitudes ofpsychoanalytic ownership -- PART II: HISTORY -- CHAPTER FIVE: Notes towards the genealogy of a word: "psychotherapy" -- CHAPTER SIX: The British Medical Association: report of the Psycho-Analysis Committee, 1929 -- CHAPTER SEVEN: What has happened to psychoanalysis in the British Society? -- CHAPTER EIGHT: An historical view -- PART III: POLITICAL -- CHAPTER NINE: The New York State psychoanalytic licence: An historical perspective -- CHAPTER TEN: The geography of psychoanalysis: sovereignty,ownership and dispossession -- CHAPTER ELEVEN: Knowledge in failure: On the crises of legitimacy withinLacanian psychoanalysis -- CHAPTER TWELVE: Who decides who decides? -- CHAPTER THIRTEEN: Can there be a monopoly on psychoanalysis? -- PART IV: SCIENCE -- CHAPTER FOURTEEN: Critique of psychoanalysis -- CHAPTER FIFTEEN: What can developmental psychopathology tell psychoanalysts about the mind? -- CHAPTER SIXTEEN: Is the brain more real than the mind? -- CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: How NOT to escape from the Grünbaum Syndrome: a critique of the "new view" of psychoanalysis -- CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: The evasiveness of Freudian apologetic -- INDEX.
Abstract:
So who does own psychoanalysis? Equally pertinent, what is psychoanalysis? Even before the death of Sigmund Freud, psychoanalysis was splintering into different groups, each convinced of their superiority to the other. There was little co-operation between them plus a great deal of resentment, recrimination and suspicion. The status quo has been evolving slowly in recent years, with increased tolerance and communication between the different factions, leading to the birth of this book.The result is an international and inter-group collaboration of eminent psychoanalysts and scholars of psychoanalysis discussing and reflecting on the meaning psychoanalysis holds for them. Their contributions have been grouped into four sections: academic, historical, political and scientific. Each paper is varied in its subject matter, looking at such issues as psychoanalytic ownership, the genealogy of the word "psychotherapy", historical perspectives on the situation, whether there can be a monopoly on psychoanalysis, and the role of the brain in relation to the mind, and has been grouped according to its main theme.The result is a provocative, challenging and stimulating read for professionals, training candidates, students and laypeople with an interest in psychoanalysis. An important contribution to this long-standing debate that should not be missed.Contributors:Jorge L. Ahumada; Pearl Appel; Bernard Burgoyne; Ann Casement; Frank Cioffi; Morris Eagle; Peter Fonagy; Adolf Grunbaum; R.D. Hinshelwood; Pearl King; Darian Leader; Dany Nobus; Michael Pokorny; Paul Roazen; Elisabeth Roudinesco; Sonu Shamdasani; Mark Solms; Thomas Szasz; Mary Target; and Jerome Wakefield.
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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