The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Psychoanalysis
Herausgeber: Camden, Vera J.
The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Psychoanalysis
Herausgeber: Camden, Vera J.
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Grounded in the complex history of literature and psychoanalysis, this volume introduces and explains the challenges of interpreting contemporary forms of literacy and media, and new mentalities through psychoanalytic methodologies.
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Grounded in the complex history of literature and psychoanalysis, this volume introduces and explains the challenges of interpreting contemporary forms of literacy and media, and new mentalities through psychoanalytic methodologies.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Cambridge Companions to Literature
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 348
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. November 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 518g
- ISBN-13: 9781108732888
- ISBN-10: 1108732887
- Artikelnr.: 62436210
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Cambridge Companions to Literature
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 348
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. November 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 518g
- ISBN-13: 9781108732888
- ISBN-10: 1108732887
- Artikelnr.: 62436210
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Introduction Reading to Recover: Literature and Psychoanalysis Vera J.
Camden; Part I. In History: 1. The varieties of psychoanalytic experience
Madelon Sprengnether; 2. Recognitions: Shakespeare, Freud and the story of
psychoanalysis Catherine Bates; 3.Rivalry and the favorite child in Jane
Austen's Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion Margaret Ann Fitzpatrick-Hanly;
4. Encountering invisible presence: Virginia Woolf and Julia Duckworth
Stephen Katherine Dalsimer; 5. Dislocating the reader: Slave motherhood and
the disrupted temporality of trauma in Toni Morrison's Beloved Jean Wyatt;
Part II. In Society: 6. Remembering violence and possibilities of mourning:
Psychoanalysis, partition literature and the writings of Sa'adat Hasan
Manto Zehra Mehdi; 7. Latin American violence novels: Pain and the Gaze of
narrative Beatriz L. Botero; 8. A man and his things: Bruce Chatwin's Utz
Adele Tutter; 9. The uses of literature and psychoanalysis in contemporary
reading groups Josie Billington; Part III. In Sight: 10. Frames of mind:
Comics and psychoanalysis in the visual field Emmy Waldman; 11.
Psychoanalysis and children's literature: Spotlighting the dialogue Ellen
Handler Spitz; 12. Reflections on psychoanalysis and class: Andrea Arnold
and Donald Winnicott Vicky Lebeau; Part IV. In Theory: 13. Why Literature?
Why psychoanalysis? Jeremy Tambling; 14. Beyond the fragmented subject Lisa
Ruddick; 15. The brokenness of being: Mourning in Queer theory and
literature Mari Ruti; 16. Animal figures Carla Freccero.
Camden; Part I. In History: 1. The varieties of psychoanalytic experience
Madelon Sprengnether; 2. Recognitions: Shakespeare, Freud and the story of
psychoanalysis Catherine Bates; 3.Rivalry and the favorite child in Jane
Austen's Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion Margaret Ann Fitzpatrick-Hanly;
4. Encountering invisible presence: Virginia Woolf and Julia Duckworth
Stephen Katherine Dalsimer; 5. Dislocating the reader: Slave motherhood and
the disrupted temporality of trauma in Toni Morrison's Beloved Jean Wyatt;
Part II. In Society: 6. Remembering violence and possibilities of mourning:
Psychoanalysis, partition literature and the writings of Sa'adat Hasan
Manto Zehra Mehdi; 7. Latin American violence novels: Pain and the Gaze of
narrative Beatriz L. Botero; 8. A man and his things: Bruce Chatwin's Utz
Adele Tutter; 9. The uses of literature and psychoanalysis in contemporary
reading groups Josie Billington; Part III. In Sight: 10. Frames of mind:
Comics and psychoanalysis in the visual field Emmy Waldman; 11.
Psychoanalysis and children's literature: Spotlighting the dialogue Ellen
Handler Spitz; 12. Reflections on psychoanalysis and class: Andrea Arnold
and Donald Winnicott Vicky Lebeau; Part IV. In Theory: 13. Why Literature?
Why psychoanalysis? Jeremy Tambling; 14. Beyond the fragmented subject Lisa
Ruddick; 15. The brokenness of being: Mourning in Queer theory and
literature Mari Ruti; 16. Animal figures Carla Freccero.
Introduction Reading to Recover: Literature and Psychoanalysis Vera J.
Camden; Part I. In History: 1. The varieties of psychoanalytic experience
Madelon Sprengnether; 2. Recognitions: Shakespeare, Freud and the story of
psychoanalysis Catherine Bates; 3.Rivalry and the favorite child in Jane
Austen's Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion Margaret Ann Fitzpatrick-Hanly;
4. Encountering invisible presence: Virginia Woolf and Julia Duckworth
Stephen Katherine Dalsimer; 5. Dislocating the reader: Slave motherhood and
the disrupted temporality of trauma in Toni Morrison's Beloved Jean Wyatt;
Part II. In Society: 6. Remembering violence and possibilities of mourning:
Psychoanalysis, partition literature and the writings of Sa'adat Hasan
Manto Zehra Mehdi; 7. Latin American violence novels: Pain and the Gaze of
narrative Beatriz L. Botero; 8. A man and his things: Bruce Chatwin's Utz
Adele Tutter; 9. The uses of literature and psychoanalysis in contemporary
reading groups Josie Billington; Part III. In Sight: 10. Frames of mind:
Comics and psychoanalysis in the visual field Emmy Waldman; 11.
Psychoanalysis and children's literature: Spotlighting the dialogue Ellen
Handler Spitz; 12. Reflections on psychoanalysis and class: Andrea Arnold
and Donald Winnicott Vicky Lebeau; Part IV. In Theory: 13. Why Literature?
Why psychoanalysis? Jeremy Tambling; 14. Beyond the fragmented subject Lisa
Ruddick; 15. The brokenness of being: Mourning in Queer theory and
literature Mari Ruti; 16. Animal figures Carla Freccero.
Camden; Part I. In History: 1. The varieties of psychoanalytic experience
Madelon Sprengnether; 2. Recognitions: Shakespeare, Freud and the story of
psychoanalysis Catherine Bates; 3.Rivalry and the favorite child in Jane
Austen's Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion Margaret Ann Fitzpatrick-Hanly;
4. Encountering invisible presence: Virginia Woolf and Julia Duckworth
Stephen Katherine Dalsimer; 5. Dislocating the reader: Slave motherhood and
the disrupted temporality of trauma in Toni Morrison's Beloved Jean Wyatt;
Part II. In Society: 6. Remembering violence and possibilities of mourning:
Psychoanalysis, partition literature and the writings of Sa'adat Hasan
Manto Zehra Mehdi; 7. Latin American violence novels: Pain and the Gaze of
narrative Beatriz L. Botero; 8. A man and his things: Bruce Chatwin's Utz
Adele Tutter; 9. The uses of literature and psychoanalysis in contemporary
reading groups Josie Billington; Part III. In Sight: 10. Frames of mind:
Comics and psychoanalysis in the visual field Emmy Waldman; 11.
Psychoanalysis and children's literature: Spotlighting the dialogue Ellen
Handler Spitz; 12. Reflections on psychoanalysis and class: Andrea Arnold
and Donald Winnicott Vicky Lebeau; Part IV. In Theory: 13. Why Literature?
Why psychoanalysis? Jeremy Tambling; 14. Beyond the fragmented subject Lisa
Ruddick; 15. The brokenness of being: Mourning in Queer theory and
literature Mari Ruti; 16. Animal figures Carla Freccero.