1st Edition

Psychoanalysis and the Postmodern Impulse Knowing and Being since Freud's Psychology

By Barnaby B. Barratt Copyright 1993
    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    According to the author, psychoanalytic theory and practice – which discloses ‘the interminable falsity of the human subject’s belief in the mastery of its own mental life’ – is in part responsible for the coming of the postmodern era. In this title, originally published in 1993, Barratt examines the role of psychoanalysis in what he sees as the crisis of modernism, shows why the modernist position – what he calls the ‘modern episteme’ – is failing, and proposes that psychoanalysis should redefine itself as a postmodern method.

    In Barratt’s innovative account of psychoanalysis, which focuses on the significance of the free-associative process, Freud’s discovery of the repressed unconscious leads to a claim that is basic to postmodern ideas: ‘that all thinking and speaking, the production and reproduction of psychic reality, is inherently dynamic, polysemous, and contradictorious .’ He argues that subsequent attempts to ‘normalize and systematize’ psychoanalysis are reactionary and antipsychoanalytic efforts to salvage the modern episteme that psychoanalysis itself calls into question.

    Preface and Acknowledgements.  1. The Psychoanalytic Revolution  2. Free-Associative Method and the Dimensions of Meaningfulness  3. Semiosis I: Signification, Subject, and Totality  4. Semiosis II: Representational Time, Law and Order  5. Desire I: Temporality and the Undiscussible Otherwise  6. Desire II: Libidinality and the Contradictorious "Unconscious"  7. Working-through I: Ethicality, Critique and Method  8. Working-through II: Free-Associative Discourse, Mobilization and Cure  9. Postmodern Subversions and the Future of Psychoanalysis.  Bibliography.  Index of Authors.  Subject Index.

    Biography

    Barnaby B. Barratt