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This fascinating collection explores the life of renowned theorist
Michael Balint in his native Budapest. With a Balint revival in
mind, Michael Balint and his World: The Budapest Years brings
together the work of psychoanalysts, social thinkers, historians,
literary scholars, artists and medical doctors who draw on
Balint’s work in a variety of ways. The book focuses on
Balint’s early years in Budapest, where he worked with Sándor
Ferenczi and a circle of colleagues, capturing the transformations
of psychoanalytic thinking as it happens in a network of living
relationships. Tracing creative disagreements as well as
collaborations, and setting these exchanges in the climate of
scientific, social and cultural developments of the time, Michael
Balint and his World: The Budapest Years follows the development of
psychoanalytic thinking during these critical times.The book
recalls the story of several ‘lost children’ of the Budapest
School and reconstitutes Balint’s important early contributions
on primary love. It also examines his little-known relationship
with Lacan, including the extended discussion of Balint’s work by
Wladimir Granoff in Lacan’s first public seminar in Paris in
1954, published here for the first time. This important book
provides a fresh perspective on Balint’s enormous contribution to
the field of psychoanalysis and will interest both scholars and
clinicians. It will also inspire those interested in clinical
practice and the applications of psychoanalysis to the cultural
sphere.
Working-through Collective Wounds discusses how collectives mourn
and create symbols. It challenges ideas of the irrational and
destructive crowd, and examines how complicated scenes of
working-through traumas take place in the streets and squares of
cities, in times of protest. Drawing on insights from the trauma
theory of psychoanalyst Sandor Ferenczi and his idea of the
'confusion of tongues', the book engages the confusions between
different registers of the social that entrap people in the scene
of trauma and bind them in alienation and submission. Raluca
Soreanu proposes a trauma theory and a theory of recognition that
start from a psychoanalytic understanding of fragmented psyches and
trace the social life of psychic fragments. The book builds on
psychosocial vignettes from the Brazilian uprising of 2013. It will
be of great interest to psychoanalysts interested in collective
phenomena, psychosocial studies scholars and social theorists
working on theories of recognition and theories of trauma.
This fascinating collection explores the life of renowned theorist
Michael Balint in his native Budapest. With a Balint revival in
mind, Michael Balint and his World: The Budapest Years brings
together the work of psychoanalysts, social thinkers, historians,
literary scholars, artists and medical doctors who draw on
Balint’s work in a variety of ways. The book focuses on
Balint’s early years in Budapest, where he worked with Sándor
Ferenczi and a circle of colleagues, capturing the transformations
of psychoanalytic thinking as it happens in a network of living
relationships. Tracing creative disagreements as well as
collaborations, and setting these exchanges in the climate of
scientific, social and cultural developments of the time, Michael
Balint and his World: The Budapest Years follows the development of
psychoanalytic thinking during these critical times.The book
recalls the story of several ‘lost children’ of the Budapest
School and reconstitutes Balint’s important early contributions
on primary love. It also examines his little-known relationship
with Lacan, including the extended discussion of Balint’s work by
Wladimir Granoff in Lacan’s first public seminar in Paris in
1954, published here for the first time. This important book
provides a fresh perspective on Balint’s enormous contribution to
the field of psychoanalysis and will interest both scholars and
clinicians. It will also inspire those interested in clinical
practice and the applications of psychoanalysis to the cultural
sphere.
Working-through Collective Wounds discusses how collectives mourn
and create symbols. It challenges ideas of the irrational and
destructive crowd, and examines how complicated scenes of
working-through traumas take place in the streets and squares of
cities, in times of protest. Drawing on insights from the trauma
theory of psychoanalyst Sandor Ferenczi and his idea of the
'confusion of tongues', the book engages the confusions between
different registers of the social that entrap people in the scene
of trauma and bind them in alienation and submission. Raluca
Soreanu proposes a trauma theory and a theory of recognition that
start from a psychoanalytic understanding of fragmented psyches and
trace the social life of psychic fragments. The book builds on
psychosocial vignettes from the Brazilian uprising of 2013. It will
be of great interest to psychoanalysts interested in collective
phenomena, psychosocial studies scholars and social theorists
working on theories of recognition and theories of trauma.
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