Psychoanalysing Ambivalence with Freud and Lacan

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Taking a deep dive into contemporary Western culture, this book suggests we are all fundamentally ambivalent beings. Peppered with relevant and stimulating examples from clinical work, film, television, politics and everyday life, Psychoanalysing Ambivalence breathes new life into an old concept.


"Covering everything from Aristotle to zombies to Breaking Bad, Carol Owens and Stephanie Swales have written a masterpiece unlocking the secrets of ambivalence. In Psychoanalysing Ambivalence with Freud and Lacan, they demonstrate that ambivalence is perhaps the central category in social relations. The need for this book is especially urgent today, in an era characterised by its various ways of refusing ambivalence, which are, Owens and Swales make clear, ways of refusing the price of interacting with others altogether. Psychoanalysing Ambivalence with Freud and Lacan speaks to the contemporary political catastrophe better than any book I've read." Todd McGowan, Professor, University of Vermont, USA "Exceptionally wide-ranging, deeply learned and laugh-out-loud funny, this book demonstrates how much psychoanalysis still has to offer when it comes to destabilising our contemporary glorification of strong, stable, and unequivocal rationalities. Yet for all its insistence on the inexorability of ambivalence, there is absolutely no reason for anyone to feel ambivalent about what Swales and Owens have done. Feel confident, stand firm and commit yourself wholeheartedly to this book. You shall be rewarded with countless redemptive questions about all that is dear to you." --Dany Nobus, Professor of Psychoanalytic Psychology, Brunel University London In 1958, Lacan claimed hat many of us "have in our presence someone who [] is truly dead, and has been for some time, dead and mummified []. Being half-dead is perhaps far more prevalent than we think []. Isn't it true that the part of every living being that is half-dead does not leave us a perfectly clear conscience? [] [We defend against] what is half-dead in us, too." Was he, in fact, already talking about the ever-more-ubiquitous zombies that Owens and Swales convincingly associate with our own increasingly unrecognized ambivalence? Reader beware: the dead, the un-dead, vampires, and myriad other uncanny creatures of the contemporary silver screen and television crawl out of the pages of this book, reminding us of those things we'd rather not know about ourselves. Thingsincluding hatred of our neighbour, prejudice, and jealousythat, as the authors persuasively argue, we are no longer supposed to feel, much less express! Why should we be surprised when they reappear in other forms and contexts? Bruce Fink, Lacanian psychoanalyst

Autorentext

Carol Owens, Ph.D., is a psychoanalyst and psychoanalytic scholar in Dublin, Ireland. She edited The Letter: Perspectives in Lacanian Psychoanalysis (20032008), Lacanian Psychoanalysis with Babies, Children and Adolescents: Further Notes on the Child (with Farrelly Quinn, Routledge, 2017) and Studying Lacan's Seminars IV and V: From Lack to Desire (with Nadezhda Almqvist, Routledge, 2019). She is the series editor for the newly establishedRoutledge series, Studying Lacan's Seminars.

Stephanie Swales, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at the University of Dallas, USA, a practicing psychoanalyst, a licensed clinical psychologist, and a clinical supervisor located in Dallas, Texas. Her first book, Perversion: A Lacanian Psychoanalytic Approach to the Subject, was published by Routledge in 2012.


Inhalt

Acknowledgements

About the authors

Foreword

  1. The tensions of ambivalence

  2. Why the zombies ate my neighbours

  3. Raising the dead: mourning and ambivalence

  4. On letting the right one in: Heisenberg and vampires

  5. Guilty secrets (Walter White, Walter Mitty, and the manosphere)

  6. Guilt, shame, and jouissance (and by the way, why your superego is not really your amigo)

  7. Extimacy, ambivalence, xenophobia

  8. The jouissance of ambivalence: we are not racists, but Afterword

Index

Weitere Informationen

  • Allgemeine Informationen
    • GTIN 09781138328457
    • Genre Psychology
    • Sprache Englisch
    • Anzahl Seiten 146
    • Größe H234mm x B156mm x T10mm
    • Jahr 2019
    • EAN 9781138328457
    • Format Kartonierter Einband
    • ISBN 978-1-138-32845-7
    • Veröffentlichung 12.12.2019
    • Titel Psychoanalysing Ambivalence with Freud and Lacan
    • Autor Stephanie Swales , Owens Carol
    • Untertitel On and Off the Couch
    • Gewicht 300g
    • Herausgeber Routledge

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