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OverviewCan contemporary psychoanalysis tell us anything about sexuality that is new and clinically meaningful? It most certainly can, answers Muriel Dimen in this work, which seeks to revive Freud's root interest in ""sexual impulses"" in the ordinary sense of the term. Drawing on feminism, postmodernism and contemporary relational theory, Dimen takes a sustained and irreverent look at hallowed assumptions about psychosexuality. For her, the paradigm shift from dualism to multiplicity that has reshaped a range of disciplines must now be brought to bear on our thinking about sexuality. We must return to the open-mindedness hiding between the lines and buried in the footnotes of Freud's writings, and thereby replace the determinism to which his thought gave rise with contemporary notions of contingency, paradox and thirdness. By setting psychoanalysis, social theory and feminism in conversation - or rather, by unveiling the colloquy that has always taken place among them - Dimen challenges clinicians and academicians alike to rethink ideas about gender, eroticism and perversion. To this end, she explores, among other topics, the relations between lust and libido; the limitations of Darwinian In tune with currents of psychoanalytic and postmodern criticism, this text's medium is its message. Dimen draws on a variety of disciplines and employs diverse literary styles to delineate the ambiguities, contradictions and paradoxes that subtend sexuality in all its personal and clinical complexity. Of special note is her interweaving of recent psychoanalytic contributions (emerging from both modern Freudian and relational traditions) with insights gleaned from contemporary philosophy and social theory. Dimen's introductory essay historicizes her perspective and modes of expression in terms of the clinical, political and intellectual events of the 1960s and 1970s. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Muriel Dimen (New York University, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Analytic Press,U.S. Volume: 22 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.589kg ISBN: 9780881633689ISBN 10: 0881633682 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 01 June 2003 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Out of stock ![]() Table of ContentsReviewsFor a book to be both postmodernist and accessible is in itself a triumph. To be enlightening and personal and to reconfigure the territory of sex, intimacy, and power is a major achievement. If you read only one book on sex and gender this year, this is the one. <p> This is a powerful book, an intimate book, a sexy book.. Throughout, Dimen encourages us to think of the ambiguity and multiplicity of gender, the paradoxical hopefulness and hopelessness of desire, and the abject corporeality of the human condition. Serious and playful, sincere and ironic, pulling together the learned and the commonplace, she manages to guide us through some of the most challenging issues in psychoanalytic thinking today: the persistent presence of the sexual, the ineffability of the unconscious, the ambiguities of lust, the impossibility of desire. <p>- Karol Marshall, Ph.D., Contemporary Psychoanalysis<p> Sexuality, Intimacy, Power is a remarkable document of recent Western intellectual and political histories. Via psychoanalysis, feminism and social theory, it attempts no less than to make some honest sense of what it is to be a person amongst people and how much we can know of such things. It is readable, brave, witty and in places, quite funny. Put simply, yo Author InformationAdjunct Professor of Clinical Psychology at New York University, Muriel Dimen, Ph.D. is an Associate Editor of Psychoanalytic Dialogues and an Executive Editor of Studies in Gender and Sexuality. She is the author of The Anthropological Imagination (1977) and Surviving Sexual Contradictions (1986) and is the coeditor of several collections, most recently Gender in Psychoanalytic Space (2002, with Virginia Goldner). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |