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This unique book examines the psychanalysis of madness and trauma
through an extended discussion of Tristram Shandy. Crossover
between literary studies and psychoanalysis. Francoise Davoine
explores the entire novel, taking a psychoanalytic lens to the
monologue by Tristram's embryo in the opening chapter, the war
traumas of Captain Toby and Corporal Trim, and several key themes
including confinement, love and history. The book presents Shandean
wit as a valuable tool in therapeutic work.
Contains personal accounts as well as psychoanalytic and literary
analysis. Davoine is the leading figure in psychoanalytic/literary
studies. Draws direct comparison between trauma in human history
(e.g. WW1 and plague) and the COVID-19 pandemic.
Contains personal accounts as well as psychoanalytic and literary
analysis. Davoine is the leading figure in psychoanalytic/literary
studies. Draws direct comparison between trauma in human history
(e.g. WW1 and plague) and the COVID-19 pandemic.
This book provides a psychoanalytic reading of works of literature,
enhancing the illuminating effect of both fields. The first of two
volumes, Madness and the Social Link: The Jean-Max Gaudilliere
Seminars 1985-2000 contains seven of the "Madness and the Social
Link" seminars given by psychoanalyst Jean-Max Gaudilliere at the
Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales (EHESS) in Paris
between 1985 and 2000, transcribed by Francoise Davoine from her
notes. Each year, the seminar was dedicated to an author who
explored madness in his depiction of the catastrophes of history.
Surprising the reader at every turn, the seminars speak of the
close intertwining of personal lives and catastrophic historical
events, and of the possibility of repairing injury to the psyche,
the mind, and the body in their wake. These volumes expose the
usefulness of literature as a tool for healing, for all those
working in therapeutic fields, and will allow lovers of literature
to discover a way of reading that gives access to more subtle
perspectives and unsuspected interrelations.
This book provides a psychoanalytic reading of works of literature,
enhancing the illuminating effect of both fields. The first of two
volumes, Madness and the Social Link: The Jean-Max Gaudilliere
Seminars 1985-2000 contains seven of the "Madness and the Social
Link" seminars given by psychoanalyst Jean-Max Gaudilliere at the
Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales (EHESS) in Paris
between 1985 and 2000, transcribed by Francoise Davoine from her
notes. Each year, the seminar was dedicated to an author who
explored madness in his depiction of the catastrophes of history.
Surprising the reader at every turn, the seminars speak of the
close intertwining of personal lives and catastrophic historical
events, and of the possibility of repairing injury to the psyche,
the mind, and the body in their wake. These volumes expose the
usefulness of literature as a tool for healing, for all those
working in therapeutic fields, and will allow lovers of literature
to discover a way of reading that gives access to more subtle
perspectives and unsuspected interrelations.
This book provides a psychoanalytic reading of works of literature,
enhancing the illuminating effect of both fields. The second of two
volumes, The Birth of a Political Self: The Jean-Max Gaudilliere
Seminars 2001-2014 contains seven of the "Madness and the Social
Link" seminars given by psychoanalyst Jean-Max Gaudilliere at the
Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales (EHESS) in Paris
between 2001 and 2014, transcribed by Francoise Davoine from her
notes. Each year, the seminar was dedicated to an author who
explored madness in their depiction of the catastrophes of history.
Surprising the reader at every turn, the seminars speak of the
close intertwining of personal lives and catastrophic historical
events, and of the possibility of repairing injury to the psyche,
the mind and the body in their wake. These volumes expose the
usefulness of literature as a tool for healing, for all those
working in therapeutic fields, and will allow lovers of literature
to discover a way of reading that gives access to more subtle
perspectives and unsuspected interrelations.
This book provides a psychoanalytic reading of works of literature,
enhancing the illuminating effect of both fields. The second of two
volumes, The Birth of a Political Self: The Jean-Max Gaudilliere
Seminars 2001-2014 contains seven of the "Madness and the Social
Link" seminars given by psychoanalyst Jean-Max Gaudilliere at the
Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales (EHESS) in Paris
between 2001 and 2014, transcribed by Francoise Davoine from her
notes. Each year, the seminar was dedicated to an author who
explored madness in their depiction of the catastrophes of history.
Surprising the reader at every turn, the seminars speak of the
close intertwining of personal lives and catastrophic historical
events, and of the possibility of repairing injury to the psyche,
the mind and the body in their wake. These volumes expose the
usefulness of literature as a tool for healing, for all those
working in therapeutic fields, and will allow lovers of literature
to discover a way of reading that gives access to more subtle
perspectives and unsuspected interrelations.
Francoise Davoine has been investigating psychotic phenomena and
trauma for over thirty years, in collaboration with Jean-Max
Gaudilliere. In this book, she draws on her literary background to
take the reader on a fascinating voyage with an unexpected but most
helpful guide: Don Quixote. In her work, Davoine approaches madness
not as a symptom, but rather as a place, the place where the
symbolic order and the social link have ruptured. She sees the
psychotic as a seeker, engaged in a form of exploration into the
nature and history of this place. This brings us to the seeker Don
Quixote. Davoine takes the reader into the world of the
knight-errant, to describe his adventures in a fascinating new
light.Cervantes, the survivor of war trauma, captivity, and all
manner of misfortunes, created this hero, first and foremost, so
that the tale be told.
Francoise Davoine has been investigating psychotic phenomena and
trauma for over thirty years, in collaboration with Jean-Max
Gaudilliere. In this book, she draws on her literary background to
take the reader on a fascinating voyage with an unexpected but most
helpful guide: Don Quixote. In her work, Davoine approaches madness
not as a symptom, but rather as a place, the place where the
symbolic order and the social link have ruptured. She sees the
psychotic as a seeker, engaged in a form of exploration into the
nature and history of this place. This brings us to the seeker Don
Quixote. Davoine takes the reader into the world of the
knight-errant, to describe his adventures in a fascinating new
light.Cervantes, the survivor of war trauma, captivity, and all
manner of misfortunes, created this hero, first and foremost, so
that the tale be told.
This unique book examines the psychanalysis of madness and trauma
through an extended discussion of Tristram Shandy. Crossover
between literary studies and psychoanalysis. Francoise Davoine
explores the entire novel, taking a psychoanalytic lens to the
monologue by Tristram's embryo in the opening chapter, the war
traumas of Captain Toby and Corporal Trim, and several key themes
including confinement, love and history. The book presents Shandean
wit as a valuable tool in therapeutic work.
After giving us a fascinating reading of Cervantes' classic novel
in Don Quixote: Fighting Melancholia, Francoise Davoine and
Jean-Max Gaudilliere co-author a second work, to reflect on the
hero's battle against perversion. To do so, they retrace his
adventures in the Cervantes' second Don Quixote, written ten years
after the first. The authors follow in his footsteps as he embarks
on this other extraordinary journey in which perversion is laid
bare for all to see, creating not only a powerful social link, but
even a form of government. Cervantes shows us how madness acts as a
means to confront it: here again, the field of action presented to
the reader is explored in rigorous detail. The reliability of this
strategy derives from the power of the given word, which has to
oppose lies, seduction, secrets, trickery and crime, in order to
confer authenticity to what madness reveals.
If your mentally ill patient dies, are you to blame? For Dr.
Francoise Davoine, a Parisian psychoanalyst, this question becomes
disturbingly real as one of her patients commits suicide on the eve
of All Saints' Day. She herself has a crisis, as she reflects on
her thirty-year career and questions whether she should ever return
to the hospital. But return she does, and thus commences a strange
voyage across several centuries and countries, in which patients,
fools, and the actors of medieval farces rise up from the past
along with great thinkers who represent the author's own
philosophical and literary sources: the humanist Erasmus,
mathematician Rene Thom, writer Antonin Artaud, philosopher Ludwig
Wittgenstein, and physicist Edwin Schrodinger, to name a few.
Imaginary dialogues ensue as the analyst conjures up an
interconnected world, where apiculture, wondrous rituals, theater,
and language games illuminate her therapeutic practice as well as
her personal history. Deeply affected by her voyage of discovery,
the author becomes capable of implementing the teachings of
psychotherapist Gaetano Benedetti, a mentor she visits at carnival
time on a final fictional stopover in Switzerland. His advice, that
the analyst become the equal of her patients and immerse herself in
their madness so as to open up a space for treatment, is premised
on the belief that individual illness is a reflection and result of
severe historical trauma. "Mother Folly," which ends on a positive
note, is an important intervention in the debate about how to treat
the mentally ill, particularly those with psychosis. A practicing
analyst and a skilled reader of literary and philosophical texts,
Davoine provides a humane antidote to our increasingly mechanized
and drug-reliant system of dealing with "fools and madmen."
If your mentally ill patient dies, are you to blame? For Dr.
Francoise Davoine, a Parisian psychoanalyst, this question becomes
disturbingly real as one of her patients commits suicide on the eve
of All Saints' Day. She herself has a crisis, as she reflects on
her thirty-year career and questions whether she should ever return
to the hospital. But return she does, and thus commences a strange
voyage across several centuries and countries, in which patients,
fools, and the actors of medieval farces rise up from the past
along with great thinkers who represent the author's own
philosophical and literary sources: the humanist Erasmus,
mathematician Rene Thom, writer Antonin Artaud, philosopher Ludwig
Wittgenstein, and physicist Edwin Schrodinger, to name a few.
Imaginary dialogues ensue as the analyst conjures up an
interconnected world, where apiculture, wondrous rituals, theater,
and language games illuminate her therapeutic practice as well as
her personal history. Deeply affected by her voyage of discovery,
the author becomes capable of implementing the teachings of
psychotherapist Gaetano Benedetti, a mentor she visits at carnival
time on a final fictional stopover in Switzerland. His advice, that
the analyst become the equal of her patients and immerse herself in
their madness so as to open up a space for treatment, is premised
on the belief that individual illness is a reflection and result of
severe historical trauma. "Mother Folly," which ends on a positive
note, is an important intervention in the debate about how to treat
the mentally ill, particularly those with psychosis. A practicing
analyst and a skilled reader of literary and philosophical texts,
Davoine provides a humane antidote to our increasingly mechanized
and drug-reliant system of dealing with "fools and madmen."
"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.
What is common among mad people, good intelligentsia and children?
What is common among Rabele and Wittgenstein, Arteau and Spentiger,
Cartecious and Cantor, Homer and japanese theatre No? Francoise
Davoine and Jean-Max Gaudilliere come up against them as they track
divergencies, deviations and achievements of human spirit in
otherworldly and unfamiliar place of trauma and destruction.
Human's personal stories are connected with History. Every time,
beyond the symptoms and crises, it is revealed the unspeakable
horror of war, betray and fall of social web. Their understanding
in the prompt of transmission gives us the key of healing. The
historization of the moments of the fall of social web in the
analysis include this certainty which is necessary for the birth of
subject. In this book, in which french psychoanalytic thought meets
with the american psychiatry in conditions of destruction or war,
the authors set in question "means" of psychiatry. They redefine
its history work as they examine again the possibility of
subjectivity in the room of traumatical. Francoise Davoine and
Jean-Max Gaudilliere are psychoanalusts and teach to Ecole des
Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris, in the contect of
seminar "Madness and social web." Professors of Classical Studies
(Greek, Latin) and doctors of Sociological Sciences have been
coperating for decates with clinicals of United States in the
context of their researches about the traumatical in the social
web.
In the course of nearly thirty years of work with patients in
psychiatric hospitals and private practice, Franoise Davoine and
Jean-Max Gaudilliere have uncovered the ways in which transference
and countertransference are affected by the experience of social
catastrophe. Handed down from one generation to the next, the
unspoken horrors of war, betrayal, dissociation, and disaster in
the families of patient and analyst alike are not only revived in
the therapeutic relationship but, when understood, actually provide
the keys to the healing process. The authors present vivid examples
of clinical work with severely traumatized patients, reaching
inward to their own intimate family histories as shaped by the
Second World War and outward toward an exceptionally broad range of
cultural references to literature, philosophy, political theory,
and anthropology. Using examples from medieval carnivals and
Japanese No theater, to Wittgenstein and Hannah Arendt, to Sioux
rituals in North Dakota, they reveal the ways in which
psychological damage is done--and undone. With a special focus on
the relationship between psychoanalysis and the neurosciences,
Davoine and Gaudilliere show how the patient-analyst relationship
opens pathways of investigation into the nature of madness, whether
on the scale of History--world wars, Vietnam--or on the scale of
Story--the silencing of horror within an individual family. In
order to show how the therapeutic approach to trauma was developed
on the basis of war psychiatry, the authors ground their clinical
theory in the work of Thomas Salmon, an American doctor from the
time of the First World War. In their case studies, they illustrate
how three of the four Salmonprinciples--proximity, immediacy, and
expectancy--affect the handling of the
transference-countertransference relationship. The fourth
principle, simplicity, shapes the style in which the authors
address their readers--that is, with the same clarity and
directness with which they speak to their patients.
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