For the Love of Psychoanalysis is a book about what exceeds or resists calculation—in life and in death. Rottenberg examines what emerges from the difference between psychoanalysis and philosophy. Part I, “Freuderrida,” announces a non-traditional Freud: a Freud associated not with sexuality, repression, unconsciousness, and symbolization, but with accidents and chance. Looking at accidents both in and of Freud’s writing, Rottenberg elaborates the unexpected insights that both produce and disrupt our received ideas of psychoanalytic theory. Whereas the close reading of Freud leaves us open to the accidents of psychoanalytic writing, Part II, “Freuderrida,” addresses itself to what transports us back and limits the openness of our horizon. H...
Book synopsis: No modern thinker has affected our views on identity and culture as forcefully as Sig...
This book argues that the notion of ‘wild’ analysis, a term coined by Freud to denote the use of wou...
I WOULD LIKE TO COME BACK TO A THEME THAT I HAVE ALREADY TREATED in Biodeconstruction: Jacques Derri...
Psychoanalytic therapy is not supposed to cure man from death, nor to help him forget about it. It i...
This paper explores the conceptual thresholds of psychoanalysis as they have been laid out over the ...
<p>The Subaltern Clinic explores a certain legacy of unreason that Sigmund Freud identified througho...
Derrida’s seminars on the death penalty have naturally spurred serious commentary in our community, ...
Book synopsis: Psychoanalysis has had a profound influence on twentieth-century thought in a wide va...
fourth society admitted to the IPA after settlement of the antitrust lawsuit against APsaA, the IPA,...
The title indicates that literature and psychoanalysis should not be seen in a relationship of maste...
were presented to an interdisciplinary audience as “tentative philo-sophical>reflections on psych...
Psychoanalysis has always needed art, in special literature, but also, visual and scenic art to reve...
This dissertation presents an attempt to work through Jacques Derrida's sustained engagement with ps...
Sigmund Freud envisioned psychoanalysis as a discipline devoted to the study of the human condition,...
Book synopsis: Psychoanalysis has always been a source of controversy throughout academic and popula...
Book synopsis: No modern thinker has affected our views on identity and culture as forcefully as Sig...
This book argues that the notion of ‘wild’ analysis, a term coined by Freud to denote the use of wou...
I WOULD LIKE TO COME BACK TO A THEME THAT I HAVE ALREADY TREATED in Biodeconstruction: Jacques Derri...
Psychoanalytic therapy is not supposed to cure man from death, nor to help him forget about it. It i...
This paper explores the conceptual thresholds of psychoanalysis as they have been laid out over the ...
<p>The Subaltern Clinic explores a certain legacy of unreason that Sigmund Freud identified througho...
Derrida’s seminars on the death penalty have naturally spurred serious commentary in our community, ...
Book synopsis: Psychoanalysis has had a profound influence on twentieth-century thought in a wide va...
fourth society admitted to the IPA after settlement of the antitrust lawsuit against APsaA, the IPA,...
The title indicates that literature and psychoanalysis should not be seen in a relationship of maste...
were presented to an interdisciplinary audience as “tentative philo-sophical>reflections on psych...
Psychoanalysis has always needed art, in special literature, but also, visual and scenic art to reve...
This dissertation presents an attempt to work through Jacques Derrida's sustained engagement with ps...
Sigmund Freud envisioned psychoanalysis as a discipline devoted to the study of the human condition,...
Book synopsis: Psychoanalysis has always been a source of controversy throughout academic and popula...
Book synopsis: No modern thinker has affected our views on identity and culture as forcefully as Sig...
This book argues that the notion of ‘wild’ analysis, a term coined by Freud to denote the use of wou...
I WOULD LIKE TO COME BACK TO A THEME THAT I HAVE ALREADY TREATED in Biodeconstruction: Jacques Derri...