Dire Mastery: Discipleship from Freud to LacanNoted French psychoanalyst Francois Roustang examines both historical psychoanalytic relationships and associations in France today to show the destructive power of discipleship and how it related to the new theory of psychosis. This book is a paperback reprint of the classic text originally published in 1982. |
Contents
The Savage Horde | 1 |
In Advance | 17 |
To Each His Own Madness | 36 |
On the Transmissibility of Analytic Theory | 55 |
Strangely Familiar | 76 |
Has He Forgotten How to Laugh? | 107 |
Toward a Theory of Psychosis | 132 |
Notes | 157 |
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Common terms and phrases
able analysand analysis analytic theory Andreas-Salomé Anna Freud become believe Brother Animal Carl Gustav Jung child concept congress consciousness continue death deferred action delirium dementia praecox desire Deutsch disciples discourse discovery dream Ecole Eissler enable Ernest Jones everything exist experience expropriated fact faith fantasies father fear feel ference Ferenczi Fliess Freud Journal Freudian Georg Groddeck Groddeck Helene Deutsch Honegger hysteria Ibid ideas illusion invented Jones Jung Jung's Karl Abraham Lacan Lacanian letter longer Lou Andreas-Salomé master means mother neurosis neurotic never one's oneself other's Otto Gross paranoia parents patient person position possible protect psychoanalysis Psychoanalytic Movement psychoanalytic society psychosis psychotic psychotic's pupil question Rank realized relation relationship remain repression Roazen schizophrenic scientific sexual Sigmund Freud someone speak suicide supposed to know Tausk theoretical things thoughts tion trans transference uncanny unconscious understand wanted wish words writes wrote