The Seductions of Psychoanalysis: Freud, Lacan and Derrida

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Cambridge University Press, Jan 26, 1990 - Literary Criticism - 433 pages
The Seductions of Psychoanalysis reflects on the history of psychoanalysis, its conceptual foundations and its relation to other disciplines. John Forrester probes the origins of psychoanalysis and its most beguiling concept, the transference, which is at once its institutional axis and experimental core. He explores the most seductive of all recent psychoanalytic traditions, that inspired by Jacques Lacan, whose radical questioning of psychoanalytic effects has been continued implicitly by Michel Foucault and explicitly by Jacques Derrida. Other key questions addressed include the significance of speech in the talking cure, and the relationship between the 'real' of psychoanalysis and the fictionality of the 'truth' it offers. Dr Forrester also focuses on the relationship between psychoanalysis and the feminine, on analysis and gossip, on the borderline of seduction and rape, and on the women who have played such a crucial role in the history of psychoanalysis, as patients, analysts or both.

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About the author (1990)

John Forrester was born in London, England on August 25, 1949. He graduated from King's College, Cambridge University with a degree in natural sciences. A Fulbright scholarship took him to Princeton University and work with Thomas Kuhn. He was a professor in the department of history and philosophy of science at Cambridge University. He was a historian and philosopher who wrote extensively on Freud and psychoanalysis. His works included Language and the Origins of Psychoanalysis, Freud's Women, and Truth Games: Lies, Money and Psychoanalysis. He died from cancer on November 24, 2015 at the age of 66.

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