Radical Psychoanalysis: An essay on free-associative praxis

Author:   Barnaby B. Barratt (University of Witwatersrand, South Africa)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138954847


Pages:   232
Publication Date:   31 May 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Radical Psychoanalysis: An essay on free-associative praxis


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Author:   Barnaby B. Barratt (University of Witwatersrand, South Africa)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.476kg
ISBN:  

9781138954847


ISBN 10:   1138954845
Pages:   232
Publication Date:   31 May 2016
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
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

Foreword by Christopher Bollas. Introductory Note. What is Radical Psychoanalysis? Freudian Roots I. Freudian Roots II. Sampling Free-associative Discourse. Textual Analysis and the Dogma of Interpretation. The Lessons of the Method: Psychic Energy. The Lessons of the Method: Theorizing Praxis. The Lessons of the Method: Triebe and Psychic Reality. On the Paramount Significance of our Psychosexualities. The Necessity of the Psychoanalyst. Resisting Praxis: Notes on Clinical and Theoretical Retreats. What is Freeing about Free-Associative Praxis?

Reviews

`This brilliantly conceptualized and carefully constructed argument that psychoanalysis must return to Freud's most revolutionary method is not simply timely, but essential to the growth of psychoanalytical theory and practice.' - Christopher Bollas, from the foreword `This book is full of passion, a cri de coeur by a committed psychoanalyst. Dr Barratt advocates a return to Freud different from Lacan's. He goes further - searching for roots that even Freud forgot because of his need for scientific respectability. Barratt reminds us that the cornerstone of psychoanalysis is Freud's method of free-association, which opens and exposes the repressed unconscious that is rooted in the flesh - the way of listening to our drives, which are virtually infinite vectors of freedom of thought. One should read this book!' - Marilia Aisenstein, Paris Psychoanalytic Society `Free-association is the radical psychoanalytic clinical position that Dr Barratt faces head on and with subtle complexity of technique, philosophy and history. Skillful descriptions of Freud's theory building and metapsychology together with a constant gaze on the ethics of psychoanalysis are woven together in a rethought history that becomes the reader's constant companion. For Barratt interpretation must always be subordinated to the ongoing quest for a free-associative matrix. This is a tour-de-force!' - Dr Jonathan Sklar, British Psychoanalytic Society `Radical Psychoanalysis underlines Freud's emphasis on the method of free-association as what is essential, central and defining for psychoanalysis. It is, as the author puts it, a method that uniquely discloses, and to a certain extent undoes, the repressiveness of human self-consciousness. Dr Barratt rightly calls his text a manifesto which urges us to commit existentially to the method of free-association. Its liberatory intent succeeds - reading it moves us into the `workplay' of lived experience at its center. Laplanche and Green to whom the book is dedicated would be pleased.' - Dr Jonathan House, American Psychoanalytic Association


'This brilliantly conceptualized and carefully constructed argument that psychoanalysis must return to Freud's most revolutionary method is not simply timely, but essential to the growth of psychoanalytical theory and practice.' - Christopher Bollas, from the foreword 'This book is full of passion, a cri de coeur by a committed psychoanalyst. Dr Barratt advocates a return to Freud different from Lacan's. He goes further - searching for roots that even Freud forgot because of his need for scientific respectability. Barratt reminds us that the cornerstone of psychoanalysis is Freud's method of free-association, which opens and exposes the repressed unconscious that is rooted in the flesh - the way of listening to our drives, which are virtually infinite vectors of freedom of thought. One should read this book!' - Marilia Aisenstein, Paris Psychoanalytic Society 'Free-association is the radical psychoanalytic clinical position that Dr Barratt faces head on and with subtle complexity of technique, philosophy and history. Skillful descriptions of Freud's theory building and metapsychology together with a constant gaze on the ethics of psychoanalysis are woven together in a rethought history that becomes the reader's constant companion. For Barratt interpretation must always be subordinated to the ongoing quest for a free-associative matrix. This is a tour-de-force!' - Dr Jonathan Sklar, British Psychoanalytic Society 'Radical Psychoanalysis underlines Freud's emphasis on the method of free-association as what is essential, central and defining for psychoanalysis. It is, as the author puts it, a method that uniquely discloses, and to a certain extent undoes, the repressiveness of human self-consciousness. Dr Barratt rightly calls his text a manifesto which urges us to commit existentially to the method of free-association. Its liberatory intent succeeds - reading it moves us into the 'workplay' of lived experience at its center. Laplanche and Green to whom the book is dedicated would be pleased.' - Dr Jonathan House, American Psychoanalytic Association


Author Information

Barnaby B. Barratt has practiced psychoanalysis in Michigan and now in South Africa. He was Professor of Family Medicine and Psychiatry at Wayne State University, and is now Senior Research Associate at the University of Witwatersrand's Institute for Social and Economic Research. His previous work includes Psychic Reality and Psychoanalytic Knowing, Psychoanalysis and the Postmodern Impulse and What is Psychoanalysis? 100 Years after Freud’s ‘Secret Committee’ (all Routledge).

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