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Overview

Rethinking the Relation between Women and Psychoanalysis: Loss, Mourning, and the Feminine uses contemporary psychoanalytic views to resituate women as desiring subjects within the psychoanalytic narrative. Contributors to this edited collection explore the various configurations of mourning, pain, regret, and grieving in diverse societies and cultures in order to reconstruct the role of women in modern psychoanalysis. They raise questions about the status of women in culture and society and contend with themes that psychoanalysts have associated with women since the late nineteenth century, such as loss and mourning, femininity and motherhood, and desire and sexuality. This book is recommended for students and scholars of psychology, gender studies, cultural studies, literature, and philosophy.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781793605818
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 12/31/2021
Series: Psychoanalytic Studies: Clinical, Social, and Cultural Contexts
Pages: 196
Product dimensions: 6.06(w) x 8.64(h) x 0.58(d)

About the Author

Hada Soria Escalante is researcher and professor at the University of Monterrey and clinical psychologist.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: On Mourning's End: Sacrificial Feminine Positions And Their Intolerable Revelation Before The Death Of The Father

Hada Soria Escalante



Chapter 2: Phantoms of Foreclosed Mourning

Marilyn Charles



Chapter 3: Devil! Sing Me The Blues… Story of a Life Struggling to be Born

Shalini Masih



Chapter 4: Killing Death With Silence: Women in the Colombian Post-Agreement Era

Angélica Toro Cardona



Chapter 5: On the Construction of Maternity

Paola J. González Castro



Chapter 6: The Sanguinary Dimension of Jealousy: Pain, Grief, and Unbending Certainty

Mario Orozco Guzmán



Chapter 7: Grief, Rêve and Son-Au-Dela

Carolina Koretzky



Chapter 8: On the Unconscious as Faith in Hidden Meaning at the Twilight of Analysis

David Hafner
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