Romantic Psychoanalysis: The Burden of the MysteryState University of New York Press, 8 ene 2009 - 333 páginas In this provocative work, Joel Faflak argues that Romanticism, particularly British Romantic poetry, invents psychoanalysis in advance of Freud. The Romantic period has long been treated as a time of incipient psychological exploration anticipating more sophisticated discoveries in the science of the mind. Romantic Psychoanalysis challenges this assumption by treating psychoanalysis in the Romantic period as a discovery unto itself, a way of taking Freud back to his future. Reading Romantic literature against eighteenth- and nineteenth-century philosophy, Faflak contends that Romantic poetry and prose—including works by Coleridge, De Quincey, Keats, and Wordsworth—remind a later psychoanalysis of its fundamental matrix in phantasy and thus of its profoundly literary nature. |
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... attempt to make sense of this life , as if to tell the record of humanity itself . But the attempt to displace the threat of madness in the conversation between men fails , for they become mutually mesmerized by their attempt to make ...
... attempt to make sense of this life , as if to tell the record of humanity itself . But the attempt to displace the threat of madness in the conversation between men fails , for they become mutually mesmerized by their attempt to make ...
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... various artifacts, textual or otherwise, that mark the past's revenance—as well as the imagoes of our attempt to come to grips with this past form parts of the same associative critical matrix 4 ROMANTIC PSYCHOANALYSIS.
... various artifacts, textual or otherwise, that mark the past's revenance—as well as the imagoes of our attempt to come to grips with this past form parts of the same associative critical matrix 4 ROMANTIC PSYCHOANALYSIS.
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... attempt to make sense of a past that is always trau- matically absent to it, criticism is inevitably itself ... attempts to comprehend it. I belabor this explanation of criticism's psychoanalytical nature pre- cisely because my object of ...
... attempt to make sense of a past that is always trau- matically absent to it, criticism is inevitably itself ... attempts to comprehend it. I belabor this explanation of criticism's psychoanalytical nature pre- cisely because my object of ...
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Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido..
Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido..
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Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido..
Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido..
Índice
1 | |
1 THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THEROMANTIC SUBJECT | 31 |
2 ANALYSIS TERMINABLE IN WORDSWORTH | 75 |
3 ANALYSIS TERMINABLE IN COLERIDGE | 115 |
4 DE QUINCEY TERMINABLE AND INTERMINABLE | 151 |
5 KEATS AND THE BURDEN OF INTERMINABILITY | 199 |
NOTES | 233 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 291 |
309 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
Romantic Psychoanalysis: The Burden of the Mystery Joel Faflak No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 2007 |
Términos y frases comunes
abject absent psychosomatic body aesthetic ambivalence analysand analysis analytical Ancient Mariner Apollo Apollonian argues associationism attempt Autobiography Biographia Biographia Literaria choanalysis Christabel cogito Coleridge Coleridge's Confessions confronts consciousness contemplation cure Dark Interpreter Dionysian Dionysus dream Edited emerges empiricism encounter Endymion Enlightenment evokes Fall of Hyperion Freud Freudian gender grief human Hyperion identity imagination imagination's inability interiority interminable Kant Keats Keats's Kristeva literary lyric Margaret's mesmerism metaphysics mind mirror stage narrative Narrator nature Nietzsche opium organicism pathology Pedlar philosophy poem poet poetic poetry potential Prelude primal scene psyche psychic psychic determinism psychology Quincey's radical rational reason Recluse repetition repressed resistance Romantic psychoanalysis Romanticism Ruined Cottage Samuel Taylor Coleridge Schopenhauer self-making semiotic sense signifies solitude soul stage sublime suffering suggests Suspiria Symbolic symptom symptomatic telling text's textual Thomas De Quincey thought tion transcendental transference trauma unconscious University Press William Wordsworth Wordsworth Wordsworthian writes