Transferences: The Aesthetics and Poetics of the Therapeutic Relationship: Psychoanalytic Horizons
Autor Dr. Maren Scheureren Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 apr 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501381447
ISBN-10: 150138144X
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Psychoanalytic Horizons
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 150138144X
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Psychoanalytic Horizons
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Addresses the question of the aesthetics and poetics of the therapeutic relationship not only from the perspective of the humanities but also from the perspective of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy
Notă biografică
Maren Scheurer is a Researcher and Lecturer in Comparative Literature and English Studies at Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany. She is executive co-editor, with Aimee Pozorski, of Philip Roth Studies.
Cuprins
AcknowledgmentsPart I. Introduction1 Psychoanalysis and the Arts2 The Therapeutic RelationshipPart II. Discourses in Dialogue: The Aesthetics and Poetics of Therapeutic Relationships3 The Art of the Therapeutic Relationship: Psychoanalytic Aesthetics4 Art as (Therapeutic) Relationship: Relational Models of Creativity, Reading, and InterpretationPart III. Reading Relationships: Therapy in Literature, Theater, and Television5 "I'm Telling Everything": Psychoanalytic Gameply in Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint6 "A Gap, a Hole, a Darkness": Epistemic Desire in J. M. Coetzee's Life & Times of Michael K7 "To Keep the Sultan Amused": Scheherazadian Narration in Margaret Atwood's Alias Grace8 "Act It Out, If You Like": Anti- and Stage-Psychiatry in Peter Shaffer's Equus9 "Locked in a Room, Listening": Talk-Show Therapy and Co-Construction in In TreatmentPart IV. In ConclusionWorks CitedNotesIndex
Recenzii
Maren Scheurer has written a fascinating study of the central role of transference in the complex interactions among psychoanalysis, literature, theater, and television. She succeeds admirably in her analysis of literary and filmic representations of psychoanalysis. She writes authoritatively, yet she is never authoritarian or dogmatic. Transference is a pioneering study of the relationship between psychoanalysis and the arts.
Maren Scheurer holds the theoretical, poetic, and emotional in a marvelously creative tension in this ambitious, engaging, and wide-ranging study. The central psychoanalytic concept of 'transference' is opened up to reveal the many potential transformations (and 'transferences') through and across the arts and psychoanalysis as therapeutic practice. Scheurer encourages us to think about creativity, and its crises, the anxiety of interpretation, and also of critique; above all, to enjoy the (as yet unknown) possibilities offered by relational dynamics. As the character Gina, from the TV series In Treatment, says: 'you can't observe yourself through your own binoculars.' The study will be of interest to academic researchers and clinical practitioners; but also, I think, to anyone interested in human relations, stories, and storytelling.
The comparisons and contrasts that Scheurer draws between psychoanalysis and literary, theatrical, film, and television art are extensive, penetrating, and insightful. One distinctive feature of this book is the painstaking and fascinating detail the author brings to the task of showing how psychoanalysis and the above-mentioned art (which she refers to as the humanities) illuminate each other, creating a synergetic 'third' between them that furthers the legitimacy of each while reinstating the irreplaceable importance of subjective narratives. I would expect this book to excite the interests of literary and film scholars, students and critics as well as psychoanalysts, psychotherapists and professors of psychology, as it delineates several intriguing perspectives around 'story telling' and narration in general.
Maren Scheurer holds the theoretical, poetic, and emotional in a marvelously creative tension in this ambitious, engaging, and wide-ranging study. The central psychoanalytic concept of 'transference' is opened up to reveal the many potential transformations (and 'transferences') through and across the arts and psychoanalysis as therapeutic practice. Scheurer encourages us to think about creativity, and its crises, the anxiety of interpretation, and also of critique; above all, to enjoy the (as yet unknown) possibilities offered by relational dynamics. As the character Gina, from the TV series In Treatment, says: 'you can't observe yourself through your own binoculars.' The study will be of interest to academic researchers and clinical practitioners; but also, I think, to anyone interested in human relations, stories, and storytelling.
The comparisons and contrasts that Scheurer draws between psychoanalysis and literary, theatrical, film, and television art are extensive, penetrating, and insightful. One distinctive feature of this book is the painstaking and fascinating detail the author brings to the task of showing how psychoanalysis and the above-mentioned art (which she refers to as the humanities) illuminate each other, creating a synergetic 'third' between them that furthers the legitimacy of each while reinstating the irreplaceable importance of subjective narratives. I would expect this book to excite the interests of literary and film scholars, students and critics as well as psychoanalysts, psychotherapists and professors of psychology, as it delineates several intriguing perspectives around 'story telling' and narration in general.