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Losing Your Head: Abjection, Aesthetic Conflict, and Psychoanalytic Criticism

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Losing Your Head: Abjection, Aesthetic Conflict, and Psychoanalytic Criticism

Contributors:

By (Author) Giuseppe Civitarese
Contributions by Sara Boffito
Contributions by Francesco Capello
Contributions by Giuseppe Civitarese

ISBN:

9781442239487

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Publication Date:

10th February 2015

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

History of art
Human figures depicted in the arts

Dewey:

150.195

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

134

Dimensions:

Width 164mm, Height 239mm, Spine 15mm

Weight:

349g

Description

Losing Your Head: Abjection, Aesthetic Conflict, and Psychoanalytic Criticism looks at the subject of beheading in art as a trope of the destruction of the mind. This book discusses both psychoanalytic theory and art criticism. It addresses critics, readers, and spectators interested in the keys of interpretation that psychoanalysis can offer, and analysts who are curious to know if artists can help them refine the tools they use every day. It asks whether artists have something to say about the concepts of reverie and negative reverie or about change as aesthetic transformation, and about aesthetic experience as a paradigm of what is most true and most profound in analysis. Why write about beheading Many art galleries feature paintings of heroines performing this cruel act: Delilah, Salome, Judith, Yael, and others. At the antithesis to this, there is another theme to be found in painting that consistently garners attention: namely, the so-called Sacred Conversation, in which the Madonna holds a small child in her lap and their gazes cross. The first scene depicts how a mind is destroyed, the second how it is born. Losing Your Head analyzes well-known artwork from classical literature, cinema, and contemporary art to enhance psychoanalytic understanding.

Reviews

Giuseppe Civitarese has given us another thought provoking and wonderful new book to open our analytic minds to new ways of thinking about what we analysts do. This volume begins with a discussion of the meaning of beheading, a topic that could not be more current as the destruction of the mind, and Civitarese beautifully examines how psychoanalytic theory and art criticism are related endeavors that each strengthen and build the mind. This erudite and aesthetically rich book continues Civitareses exploration of psychoanalysis and aesthetics that he began in his previous publication, The Violence of Emotions: Bion and Post-Bionian Psychoanalysis. This present volume further establishes Civitarese as a leading creative thinker in contemporary psychoanalysis. -- Lawrence J. Brown, author of Intersubjective Processes and the Unconscious: Freudian, Kleinian and Bionian Perspectives
Focusing here on the unexpected theme of decapitation (the real as well as the metaphorical losses of heads and minds), Giuseppe Civitareses critical reflections upon such a variety of artistic creations as a Hanekes movie, a Boccaccios short story, or a video installation from the Venice Biennale leave us intellectually stimulated and enriched. Civitareses wide-ranging psychoanalytic scholarship on aesthetics, combined with his elegant writing style, will only surprise those readers not yet familiar with the depth and breadth of his contributions to psychoanalysis. -- Andrea Sabbadini, British Psychoanalytical Society
Civitarese's extensive clinical experience and knowledge of Freud, Klein, Meltzer, Kristeva, and especially Bion, is here deployed in analyses of the art object, film, installation, and poetry to illuminate the nature of aesthetic experience and its fundamental place in the space and relationships of the analytic encounter. -- Lesley Caldwell, PhD, University College London

Author Bio

Giuseppe Civitarese, PhD, is a psychiatrist and training and supervising analyst of the Italian Psychoanalytic Society (SPI) and a member of the American Psychoanalytic Association (APsaA), both affiliated with the International Psychoanalytic Association (IPA).

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