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Wittgenstein's Folly (Paperback, New)
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Wittgenstein's Folly (Paperback, New)
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"Wittgenstein's Folly" is a translation of Francoise Davoine's "La
Folie Wittgenstein."
"Folly" has many meanings, referring to the "madness" of the fool,
as well as to the madness of what we call the "mentally ill."
"Folly" is linked with the fools of medieval plays, with the fools
of Renaissance satires, and with the folly that speaks as a woman
in Erasmus's "Praise of Folly." In this book by Francoise Davoine,
"folly" often refers to the madness of those isolated by historical
catastrophes that have not been processed across generations, and
which can only be studied by exploring the fields of madness, by
finding ways to hear Folly herself speaking. The title does not
refer specifically to the madness or folly of Wittgenstein himself.
"Wittgenstein's Folly" is about psychoanalytic experience, and
specifically about the madness or folly that comes to reside, in a
way, in what Francoise Davoine refers to as a "psychotic
transference."
Francoise Davoine is a psychoanalyst trained in the 1970s at
Lacan's Ecole freudienne de Paris. With advanced degrees in the
Classics and in French Literature, she obtained a doctorate in
sociology at the Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales
(School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences), at the Centre
d'etude des mouvements sociaux (Center for the Study of Social
Movements), led by Alain Touraine. She and her husband, Jean-Max
Gaudilliere, have led a weekly seminar (Madness and the Social
Link) at that Center for over thirty years.
Francoise Davoine is convinced that psychosis is a field of
research for both analyst and analysand, in which the events of
History, or perhaps pieces of those events, which could not be
processed by the individual or even by human beings as a group, can
be identified, recognized, and finally put in a place where they
can be fully experienced within a symbolic framework created by
social links; i.e., with others, within a social world.
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