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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Agnes Aflalo , Adrian PricePublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Karnac Books Dimensions: Width: 14.70cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.294kg ISBN: 9781782201649ISBN 10: 1782201645 Pages: 192 Publication Date: 15 May 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() 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"ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ABOUT THE AUTHOR PREFACE Bernard-Henri LevyCHAPTER ONE The AmendmentCHAPTER TWO Procrustes and the river of sludge I CHAPTER THREE Procrustes and the river of sludge II CHAPTER FOUR Cognitive-behavioural calculation CHAPTER FIVE Discipline and banish CHAPTER SIX Bioreligion CHAPTER SEVEN The commodification of knowledges A FEW WORDS OF CONCLUSION APPENDIX I The new Amendment APPENDIX II ""Scientifically"" discrediting psychoanalysis and attacking civil liberties NOTES REFERENCES INDEX"Reviews'This is a liberating book. All those who, with their eyes fixed on antique modes of tyranny, run the risk of failing to recognise the decidedly human face that tyranny is putting on today would do well to read it.'- Bernard-Henri Levy, writer and philosopher'Psychoanalysis used to be in unison with a certain state of science and the world. But being itself a symptom of discontent in civilisation, it was unable to prevent the latter from worsening. It has not, however, said its last word, which is precisely the meaning of this failed assassination : to maintain the necessary patience and flexibility for taking stock of the ravaging effects of cognitive-behaviourism.'- Nathalie Georges-Lambrichs, psychoanalyst, and member of the Ecole de la Cause freudienne 'They have been trying to palm off on us a behavioural, evaluated, quantified version of mankind that corresponds to a norm. Faced with the rise in power of practices of social control and human dressage , The Failed Assassination of Psychoanalysis is a real breath of fresh air. When you get to the end of the book, you tell yourself that once again we have narrowly avoided the worst.'- Karim Sarroub, novelist and journalist at The Huffington Post'If every bungled action calls for interpretation, the failed assassination of psychoanalysis is no exception to the rule. With great brilliance, Agnes Aflalo has deciphered this state of affairs, opening a new breach in the shaky edifice of scientism and the imposture of the cognitive-behaviourists. She goes back to the very sources of cognitivism, and demonstrates the vacuity of its theses point by point.'- Deborah Gutermann-Jacquet, clinical psychologist and author of The Equivocations of Gender'With measured passion and carefully thought out argumentation, Agnes Aflalo invites us to discover what psychoanalysis in France recently escaped: nothing less than an assassination. The architect of this act is designated unequivocally: the discourse of evaluation. The author of the book traces this moment in history when the henchmen of cognitive and behavioural therapy, securely fastened to their death drive, attempted to reduce the subject to an object.'- Stephane Riand, lawyer and journalist'The rapid proliferation and mutation of regulatory and evaluatory bodies have become so much part of the ambient discourse of institutional practice that professionals in the field have not always been able to keep track of these changes or to pause to consider their implications. As a result, the gradual erosion of professional autonomy and patient rights that has accompanied the rise of the discourses of audit and evaluation, evidence-based practice, and payment by results has barely been perceived let alone opposed. It is perhaps here that the contrast and specificity of the circumstances in France, as detailed in Agnes Aflalo's book, prove enlightening in helping us find our bearings in the situation we currently find ourselves faced with.'- Roger Litten, psychoanalyst and member of the London Society of the New Lacanian School "'This is a liberating book. All those who, with their eyes fixed on antique modes of tyranny, run the risk of failing to recognise the decidedly human face that tyranny is putting on today would do well to read it.'- Bernard-Henri Levy, writer and philosopher'Psychoanalysis used to be in unison with a certain state of science and the world. But being itself a symptom of discontent in civilisation, it was unable to prevent the latter from worsening. It has not, however, said its last word, which is precisely the meaning of this ""failed assassination"": to maintain the necessary patience and flexibility for taking stock of the ravaging effects of cognitive-behaviourism.'- Nathalie Georges-Lambrichs, psychoanalyst, and member of the Ecole de la Cause freudienne 'They have been trying to palm off on us a behavioural, evaluated, quantified version of mankind that corresponds to a norm. Faced with the rise in power of practices of social control and human ""dressage"", The Failed Assassination of Psychoanalysis is a real breath of fresh air. When you get to the end of the book, you tell yourself that once again we have narrowly avoided the worst.'- Karim Sarroub, novelist and journalist at The Huffington Post'If every bungled action calls for interpretation, the ""failed assassination"" of psychoanalysis is no exception to the rule. With great brilliance, Agnes Aflalo has deciphered this state of affairs, opening a new breach in the shaky edifice of scientism and the imposture of the cognitive-behaviourists. She goes back to the very sources of cognitivism, and demonstrates the vacuity of its theses point by point.'- Deborah Gutermann-Jacquet, clinical psychologist and author of The Equivocations of Gender'With measured passion and carefully thought out argumentation, Agnes Aflalo invites us to discover what psychoanalysis in France recently escaped: nothing less than an assassination. The architect of this act is designated unequivocally: the discourse of evaluation. The author of the book traces this moment in history when the henchmen of cognitive and behavioural therapy, securely fastened to their death drive, attempted to reduce the subject to an object.'- Stephane Riand, lawyer and journalist'The rapid proliferation and mutation of regulatory and evaluatory bodies have become so much part of the ambient discourse of institutional practice that professionals in the field have not always been able to keep track of these changes or to pause to consider their implications. As a result, the gradual erosion of professional autonomy and patient rights that has accompanied the rise of the discourses of audit and evaluation, evidence-based practice, and payment by results has barely been perceived let alone opposed. It is perhaps here that the contrast and specificity of the circumstances in France, as detailed in Agnes Aflalo's book, prove enlightening in helping us find our bearings in the situation we currently find ourselves faced with.'- Roger Litten, psychoanalyst and member of the London Society of the New Lacanian School" 'This is a liberating book. All those who, with their eyes fixed on antique modes of tyranny, run the risk of failing to recognise the decidedly human face that tyranny is putting on today would do well to read it.'- Bernard-Henri Levy, writer and philosopher'Psychoanalysis used to be in unison with a certain state of science and the world. But being itself a symptom of discontent in civilisation, it was unable to prevent the latter from worsening. It has not, however, said its last word, which is precisely the meaning of this ""failed assassination"": to maintain the necessary patience and flexibility for taking stock of the ravaging effects of cognitive-behaviourism.'- Nathalie Georges-Lambrichs, psychoanalyst, and member of the Ecole de la Cause freudienne 'They have been trying to palm off on us a behavioural, evaluated, quantified version of mankind that corresponds to a norm. Faced with the rise in power of practices of social control and human ""dressage"", The Failed Assassination of Psychoanalysis is a real breath of fresh air. When you get to the end of the book, you tell yourself that once again we have narrowly avoided the worst.'- Karim Sarroub, novelist and journalist at The Huffington Post'If every bungled action calls for interpretation, the ""failed assassination"" of psychoanalysis is no exception to the rule. With great brilliance, Agnes Aflalo has deciphered this state of affairs, opening a new breach in the shaky edifice of scientism and the imposture of the cognitive-behaviourists. She goes back to the very sources of cognitivism, and demonstrates the vacuity of its theses point by point.'- Deborah Gutermann-Jacquet, clinical psychologist and author of The Equivocations of Gender'With measured passion and carefully thought out argumentation, Agnes Aflalo invites us to discover what psychoanalysis in France recently escaped: nothing less than an assassination. The architect of this act is designated unequivocally: the discourse of evaluation. The author of the book traces this moment in history when the henchmen of cognitive and behavioural therapy, securely fastened to their death drive, attempted to reduce the subject to an object.'- Stephane Riand, lawyer and journalist'The rapid proliferation and mutation of regulatory and evaluatory bodies have become so much part of the ambient discourse of institutional practice that professionals in the field have not always been able to keep track of these changes or to pause to consider their implications. As a result, the gradual erosion of professional autonomy and patient rights that has accompanied the rise of the discourses of audit and evaluation, evidence-based practice, and payment by results has barely been perceived let alone opposed. It is perhaps here that the contrast and specificity of the circumstances in France, as detailed in Agnes Aflalo's book, prove enlightening in helping us find our bearings in the situation we currently find ourselves faced with.'- Roger Litten, psychoanalyst and member of the London Society of the New Lacanian School Author InformationAgnes Aflalo is a psychoanalyst, member of the Ecole de la Cause freudienne and the World Association of Psychoanalysis. Her articles have appeared in various collections in French, and in 'Hurly-Burly', 'The International Lacanian Journal of Psychoanalysis'. Since its first publication in French in 2009, 'The Failed Assassination of Psychoanalysis' has been translated into English, Spanish, and Portuguese. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |