John Forrester’s passionate yet probing engagement with Freud and psychoanalysis is legendary. Here, in six introductory lectures delivered to his students at the University of Cambridge, his range and lucidity bring the evolution of Freud’s thinking and the nature of Freud’s discoveries into sharp focus. With an historian’s eye for context, Forrester explores Freud’s biography, the scientific moment, the radical subject matter of the field itself – sex, dreams, desire, the unconscious, childhood, language – as well as Freud’s development of a new clinical practice.
Forrester also explores both the growth of the psychoanalytic movement and the question of what kind of beast it might be as it travels through time and geography. He illuminates the cultural and revolutionary impact of psychoanalytic thinking – not only Freud’s, but that of some of his progeny in the many places where the movement flourished.
Freud and Psychoanalysis takes us from Vienna to London, from Paris to New York and Hollywood, from the lab to the couch, to the campus, to film and to literature. This is a slim book that packs a big punch. It invites any curious reader into a field and a way of thinking that shaped the twentieth century.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Editor’s Preface Lisa Appignanesi
Foreword Darian Leader
Lecture One: A Whole Climate of Opinion
Lecture Two: The Historical Foundations of Psychoanalysis
Lecture Three: Dreams and Sexuality
Lecture Four: Psychoanalysis as a Theory of Culture
Lecture Five: Psychoanalysis as a Movement
Lecture Six: The Significance of Psychoanalysis in the Twentieth Century
Endnotes
Further Reading
Über den Autor
John Forrester was Professor of History and Philosophy of the Sciences at the University of Cambridge.
Lisa Appignanesi is a prize-winning author of many books, including Everyday Madness: On Grief, Anger, Loss and Love.