From Anxiety to Zoolander: Notes on Psychoanalysis

Author:   Anouchka Grose
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781782203933


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   31 October 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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From Anxiety to Zoolander: Notes on Psychoanalysis


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Overview

From Anxiety to Zoolander is a collection of writings on psychoanalytic themes. Each text was originally delivered as a talk, and the book aims to retain the informality and directness of the spoken word. While many of the chapters focus on clinical questions, they also speak about art, comedy, fashion, fame and fiction. Freudian and Lacanian theories are central, but the book as a whole is far from doctrinaire, with all areas of psychoanalytic thinking being up for discussion. Clinical topics include acting out, narcissism, gender, transference, diagnosis, and the Oedipus complex, tracing ideas through Freud and the post-Freudians, and examining their relevance to the contemporary psychoanalytic clinic. Non-clinical topics include Louise Bourgeois's notes on her analysis, stand-up comedy, Paris Hilton's televised friendship auditions, and Ben Stiller's penetrating stupidity in Zoolander 2. While each essay is self-contained, the book argues overall for the continued relevance of Freudian ideas in the treatment of psychic suffering, as well as in the interpretation of cultural phenomena.

Full Product Details

Author:   Anouchka Grose
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Karnac Books
Weight:   0.362kg
ISBN:  

9781782203933


ISBN 10:   1782203931
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   31 October 2017
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Acting out. Anxiety. Cure. Family. Fashion. Gender. Jokes. Mirror. Neurosis. Objects. Oedipus. Suicide. Time. Transference. The uncanny. War. Wishes. Zoolander.

Reviews

The entertainment value of this lively book cleverly disguises the complex issues it teaches.Anouchka Grose discusses scholarly subjects amusingly and amusing questions in a scholarly way.This book is enlightened by her refusal to admire the emperor's new clothes, and painstakingly acquired knowledge is conveyed with deceptive ease. In addition, her many clinical illustrations give the book credibility - these are not the ramblings of an armchair analyst but the reflections of a practitioner of the unconscious. --Lionel Bailly, UCL Psychoanalysis Unit Not only will this change the way you think about topics as deep and wide as sex, death, fashion, time, family, robots, mirrors, ladyboys, Lacan and Zoolander 2, but Anouchka Grose's writing is so engaging, her insights are so surprising, her enjoyments are so infectious, and her psychoanalysis is so undogmatic that you'll come away from this book feeling wiser, wittier, wilder - even kinder. Once you've finished it, you'll immediately want to read it again. You'll also want to give a copy to everyone you know. --Devorah Baum, Department of English University of Southampton From Anxiety to Zoolander by way of family and fashion, suicide and war and much, much more!This is no dictionary of psychoanalytic concepts. It is no map, no guide to psychoanalysis. Rather, Grose's selection of her talks gives the reader an insight into how a practicing psychoanalyst engages with thorny issues of everyday life as well as the controversies and differences that have characterized psychoanalysis and clinical practice since its inception.Those readers who are new to Lacan's ideas will welcome the clarity of the writing that elucidates difficult concepts and ideas without eluding their complexities. Those readers who are practitioners, or in training as psychoanalysts and therapists, will particularly appreciate the honesty of the clinical examples that illustrate Grose's ideas and ways of thinking.This elegant and sophisticated collection of talks captures the maddening and provoking character of psychoanalytic practice and knowledge and should be read by anyone with a passing interest in psychoanalysis, and what it might have to say about the problems of everyday life, as well as by those who are already captured by psychoanalytic ideas and the impossibilities of the clinic. --Anne Worthington, Centre for Psychoanalysis Middlesex University


The entertainment value of this lively book cleverly disguises the complex issues it teaches.Anouchka Grose discusses scholarly subjects amusingly and amusing questions in a scholarly way.This book is enlightened by her refusal to admire the emperor's new clothes, and painstakingly acquired knowledge is conveyed with deceptive ease. In addition, her many clinical illustrations give the book credibility - these are not the ramblings of an armchair analyst but the reflections of a practitioner of the unconscious. --Lionel Bailly, UCL Psychoanalysis Unit (09/29/2017) From Anxiety to Zoolander by way of family and fashion, suicide and war and much, much more! This is no dictionary of psychoanalytic concepts. It is no map, no guide to psychoanalysis. Rather, Grose's selection of her talks gives the reader an insight into how a practicing psychoanalyst engages with thorny issues of everyday life as well as the controversies and differences that have characterized psychoanalysis and clinical practice since its inception. Those readers who are new to Lacan's ideas will welcome the clarity of the writing that elucidates difficult concepts and ideas without eluding their complexities. Those readers who are practitioners, or in training as psychoanalysts and therapists, will particularly appreciate the honesty of the clinical examples that illustrate Grose's ideas and ways of thinking. This elegant and sophisticated collection of talks captures the maddening and provoking character of psychoanalytic practice and knowledge and should be read by anyone with a passing interest in psychoanalysis, and what it might have to say about the problems of everyday life, as well as by those who are already captured by psychoanalytic ideas and the impossibilities of the clinic. --Anne Worthington, Centre for Psychoanalysis Middlesex University (09/29/2017) Not only will this change the way you think about topics as deep and wide as sex, death, fashion, time, family, robots, mirrors, ladyboys, Lacan and Zoolander 2, but Anouchka Grose's writing is so engaging, her insights are so surprising, her enjoyments are so infectious, and her psychoanalysis is so undogmatic that you'll come away from this book feeling wiser, wittier, wilder - even kinder. Once you've finished it, you'll immediately want to read it again. You'll also want to give a copy to everyone you know. --Devorah Baum, Department of English University of Southampton (09/29/2017)


The entertainment value of this lively book cleverly disguises the complex issues it teaches.Anouchka Grose discusses scholarly subjects amusingly and amusing questions in a scholarly way.This book is enlightened by her refusal to admire the emperor's new clothes, and painstakingly acquired knowledge is conveyed with deceptive ease. In addition, her many clinical illustrations give the book credibility - these are not the ramblings of an armchair analyst but the reflections of a practitioner of the unconscious. --Lionel Bailly, UCL Psychoanalysis Unit Not only will this change the way you think about topics as deep and wide as sex, death, fashion, time, family, robots, mirrors, ladyboys, Lacan and Zoolander 2, but Anouchka Grose's writing is so engaging, her insights are so surprising, her enjoyments are so infectious, and her psychoanalysis is so undogmatic that you'll come away from this book feeling wiser, wittier, wilder - even kinder. Once you've finished it, you'll immediately want to read it again. You'll also want to give a copy to everyone you know. --Devorah Baum, Department of English University of Southampton From Anxiety to Zoolander by way of family and fashion, suicide and war and much, much more! This is no dictionary of psychoanalytic concepts. It is no map, no guide to psychoanalysis. Rather, Grose's selection of her talks gives the reader an insight into how a practicing psychoanalyst engages with thorny issues of everyday life as well as the controversies and differences that have characterized psychoanalysis and clinical practice since its inception. Those readers who are new to Lacan's ideas will welcome the clarity of the writing that elucidates difficult concepts and ideas without eluding their complexities. Those readers who are practitioners, or in training as psychoanalysts and therapists, will particularly appreciate the honesty of the clinical examples that illustrate Grose's ideas and ways of thinking. This elegant and sophisticated collection of talks captures the maddening and provoking character of psychoanalytic practice and knowledge and should be read by anyone with a passing interest in psychoanalysis, and what it might have to say about the problems of everyday life, as well as by those who are already captured by psychoanalytic ideas and the impossibilities of the clinic. --Anne Worthington, Centre for Psychoanalysis Middlesex University


Author Information

Anouchka Grose is a psychoanalyst and writer practising in London. She is a member of CFAR and The College of Psychoanalysts-UK. She has written non-fiction: 'No More Silly Love Songs: a realist's guide to romance' (Portobello, 2010) and 'Are you Considering Therapy' (Karnac, 2011), as well as writing fiction: 'Ringing for You' (Harper Collins, 1999) and 'Darling Daisy' (Harper Collins, 2000). She is the editor of 'Hysteria Today' (2015), a collection of essays on hysteria in the contemporary psychoanalytic clinic. Her journalism is published in The Guardian, and she also writes for numerous art and fashion publications. She has taught at Camberwell School of Art and gives talks on art and psychoanalysis in museums and galleries, as well as sometimes speaking on the radio.

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