Winner of the 2012 Goethe award This is the first book of its kind
to offer a sustained critique of contemporary psychoanalytic
thought favoring relational, postmodern, and intersubjective
perspectives, which largely define American psychoanalysis today.
Conundrums turns an eye toward the philosophical underpinnings of
contemporary theory; its theoretical relation to traditional
psychoanalytic thought; clinical implications for therapeutic
practice; political and ethical ramifications of contemporary
praxis; and its intersection with points of consilience that emerge
from these traditions. Central arguments and criticisms advanced
throughout the book focus on operationally defining the key tenets
of contemporary perspectives; the seduction and ambiguity of
postmodernism; the question of selfhood and agency; illegitimate
attacks on classical psychoanalysis; the role of therapeutic
excess; contemporary psychoanalytic politics; and the question of
consilience between psychoanalysis as a science versus
psychoanalysis as part of the humanities. The historical criticisms
against psychoanalysis are further explored in the context of the
current philosophical-scientific binary that preoccupies the field.
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