Joy and the Objects of Psychoanalysis: Literature, Belief, and Neurosis

by

Write a Review

Shows how literature can aid psychoanalysts in the understanding of psychological conflicts.For more than a hundred years, psychoanalysts have applied their theories of neurosis to objects of culture, including literature. In this book, psychoanalyst, anthropologist, and scholar of religion Volney P. Gay reverses field and uses literature to reevaluate psychoanalysis. Arguing that neurosis occurs when we cannot recollect joy, Gay focuses upon the nature of joy as articulated in drama and literature. It is the absence of joy, he suggests, that evokes in children a lifelong quest for repair and restitution, usually through the stories they tell themselves. Therefore, Gay argues, literary accounts of joy are essential to contemporary psychoanalysts because they illuminate the nature of an "object" that, when absent, produces the form of human suffering that Freud named "neurosis." Throughout the book, case studies are juxtaposed with analyses of works by Plato, Homer, Shakespeare, Tolstoy, Hawthorne, Wharton, and others in order to explore the notion that the objects of psychoanalysis (and similar psychotherapies) are structured like narratives rather than organisms or other natural objects.

Joy and the Objects of Psychoanalysis: Literature, Belief, and Neurosis Reviews | Toppsta

9780791451007

Share on

Videos

If you would like to provide a video review please sign up to our video panel.

Series

This is Book 1 in the SUNY Series in Psychoanalysis and Culture Series. See all SUNY Series in Psychoanalysis and Culture books here.

Sign up to our newsletter for...

Free Book Giveaways, Recommendations & more

Be the first to write a Review


No one has written a review for 'Joy and the Objects of Psychoanalysis: Literature, Belief, and Neurosis'

Why not be the first to share your opinion?