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Movement, Velocity, and Rhythm from a Psychoanalytic Perspective:
Variable Speed(s) explores philosophical and psychoanalytic
theories, as well as artworks, that show sensible bodily rituals
for reviving our social and subjective lives. With a wide range of
contributors from interdisciplinary backgrounds, it informs readers
on how to find rituals for syncing ourselves with others and world
rhythms. The book is divided into three parts on variability,
speed, and slowness, and explores rhythmic rituals of renewal,
revolution, and reflection. Each chapter provides unique examples
from the applied arts, film, television, and literature to show how
different practices of rhythm might aid in creative and deep
contemplation and includes philosophical and cultural theories for
bodily and rhythmic renewal. Without being limited to a clinical
perspective, this book provides wide-ranging discussions of the
relation between rhythm, trauma, cultural studies, psychosocial
studies, continental philosophy, critical psychology, Lacan, and
film, to explore modes of becoming more attuned to each moment, to
others, and to our own era. Movement, Velocity, and Rhythm from a
Psychoanalytic Perspective will be essential reading for Lacanian
psychoanalysts in practice and in training, as well as anyone
interested in rhythm at the intersection of Lacanian psychoanalysis
and continental philosophy.
Movement, Velocity, and Rhythm from a Psychoanalytic Perspective:
Variable Speed(s) explores philosophical and psychoanalytic
theories, as well as artworks, that show sensible bodily rituals
for reviving our social and subjective lives. With a wide range of
contributors from interdisciplinary backgrounds, it informs readers
on how to find rituals for syncing ourselves with others and world
rhythms. The book is divided into three parts on variability,
speed, and slowness, and explores rhythmic rituals of renewal,
revolution, and reflection. Each chapter provides unique examples
from the applied arts, film, television, and literature to show how
different practices of rhythm might aid in creative and deep
contemplation and includes philosophical and cultural theories for
bodily and rhythmic renewal. Without being limited to a clinical
perspective, this book provides wide-ranging discussions of the
relation between rhythm, trauma, cultural studies, psychosocial
studies, continental philosophy, critical psychology, Lacan, and
film, to explore modes of becoming more attuned to each moment, to
others, and to our own era. Movement, Velocity, and Rhythm from a
Psychoanalytic Perspective will be essential reading for Lacanian
psychoanalysts in practice and in training, as well as anyone
interested in rhythm at the intersection of Lacanian psychoanalysis
and continental philosophy.
This book examines the use of myth in contemporary popular and high
culture, and proposes that the aporetic subject, the individual
that 'does not know', is the ideal contemporary subject. Using
several contemporary novels, films and theatrical plays that
illustrate aporia - such as Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief
(Riordan, 2007), Tron Legacy (Koninski, 2010), Welcome to Thebes
(Buffini, 2010), The Photographers (Koundouros, 1998), Prometheus
(2012) and Prometheus Retrogressing (Sfikas, 1998) - Angie Voela
introduces common ground between Lacanian psychoanalysis and some
of Freud's most ardent critics, Michel Foucault and Jean
Baudrillard, as well as the cultural philosopher Bernard Stiegler.
These unprecedented systematic comparisons broaden the scope and
impact of Lacanian psychoanalysis in inter-disciplinary debates of
philosophy and culture and Voela argues that apart from dealing
with the past, psychoanalysis must also deal more explicitly with
the present and the future. She presents a unique inquiry into
modern subjectivity that will be of great interest to scholars of
psychoanalysis, philosophy, film, literature and contemporary
culture.
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