To what extent are the concepts of fatherhood and family, as proposed by Sigmund Freud, still valid?
Psychoanalysis, Fatherhood, and the Modern Family traces the development of Freud’s theory of the Oedipus complex and discusses his ideas in the context of recent psychoanalytic work, new sociological data, and theoretical explorations on gender and diversity. Contributors include representatives from many academic disciplines, as well as practicing psychoanalysts who reflect on their experience with patients. Their exciting essays break new ground in defining who a father is—and what a father may be.
表中的内容
1. Introduction: Psychoanalysis, Fatherhood, and the Work of Mourning.- Part I Freud Discovers Oedipus.- 2. The Road to Thebes: Freud and French Retrospective Medicine.- 3. The Dawn of the Oedipus Complex: A Tale of Two Letters.- Part II The Oedipus Complex After Freud.- 4. Freud’s Oedipal Myth and Lacan’s Critique.- 5. Deleuze-Guattari and the End of Oedipus.- 6. The Nuclear Family and Its Discontents: Freud, Jung, and Szondi and the Persistence of the Dynasty.- Part III Private and Public Fathers.- 7. Black Fathers, Oedipal Issues, and Modernity.- 8. Does a Father Need to be a Man?.- 9. Blindness and Repair in Institutional Psychoanalysis: A Brief History.- 10. A Fatherless Nation: Alexander Mitscherlich Analyzes Post-War Germany.- Part IV Media Matters.- 11. The Planetary Father Function.- 12. What is Called Father? (A Fissure in Familialism).
关于作者
Liliane Weissberg is Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor in Arts and Science at the University of Pennsylvania, USA. Among her recent book publications are
Nachträglich, grundlegend: Der Kommentar als Denkform in der jüdischen Moderne (edited with Andreas Kilcher, 2018), and
Benjamin Veitel Ephraim: Kaufmann, Schriftsteller, Geheimagent (2021). She has published widely on Sigmund Freud’s life and work, and is an honorary member of the Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia.