Imaginary Existences: A psychoanalytic exploration of phantasy,
fiction, dreams and daydreams interweaves scholarly psychoanalytic
knowledge and extensive clinical experience with insights derived
from close readings of great literature in a uniquely imaginative
and creative manner, convincingly demonstrating how these two ways
of thinking psychoanalysis and literary criticism organically
relate to each other. This is simultaneously a psychoanalytic book
and a book about literature, illuminating the imaginative
possibilities present within both the psychoanalytic encounter and
the act of reading fiction. Scholarly and well researched, the
psychoanalytic ideas presented have their basis in the work of
Freud and Klein and some of their followers; the extensive and
innovative writing about the great authors in Western literature is
equally scholarly and lucent.
Here, Ignes Sodre explores creativity itself and, specifically,
the impediments to creative thinking: defences, mostly
narcissistic, against dependency, guilt and loss, and the mis-use
of imagination to deny reality. In her studies of the characters
created by authors such as George Eliot, Cervantes, Flaubert,
Thomas Mann, Proust and Shakespeare, Sodre examines the way great
writers create characters who mis-use their imagination, twisting
reality into romantic daydreams or sado-masochistic enactments,
which petrify experience and freeze the fluidity of thought. Her
clinical studies continue and expand this theme, broadening the
field and lending verification and weight to the arguments.
These two poles of Sodre s thinking psychoanalysis and
literature interact seamlessly in "Imaginary Existences;" the two
disciplines work together, each an intimate part of a learned
exploration of the human condition: our desires, our fears and our
delusions. This convergence pays tribute to the great depth of the
fictional work being studied and to the psychological validity of
the psychoanalytic ideas. This book will be of interest to
psychoanalysts, psychologists, psychotherapists, literary critics,
and those interested in literature and literary criticism."
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