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This book interrogates the “end of analysis” in
psychoanalytic thought from Freud to Lacan. It demonstrates
that the notions of mourning, renunciation, liquidation of
transference, and traversal of fantasy cannot serve as a settlement
for the castration complex (i.e., central to neurosis) but are
rather prey to the castration complex itself. It shows how
psychoanalysis remains incomplete as long as it has not surpassed
them as fantasies sustained by psychoanalytic ideology. In other
words, it argues that the analytic procedure must pull
psychoanalysis out of this therapeutic tradition for it to be
complete and to instigate an attempt of its renewal. The book
equally revisits Freud’s and Lacan’s underpinnings in the
Enlightenment project, in order to formulate the problem of
transference on proper dialectical foundations—that is, the
mechanism of alienation from Descartes to Hegel, Kierkegaard’s
concept of anxiety, as well as the concepts of authority and value
in Durkheim, Mauss, and Marx. In doing so, it provides fresh
insights that will appeal to practitioners, as well as to scholars
of psychoanalysis and philosophy.
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