ABSTRACT

This psychobiographical study of the renowned French pediatrician and psychoanalyst Françoise Dolto introduces both her theories of child development and her unique insights into language and identity.

A friend of Jacques Lacan’s, Dolto believed that we are all humanized through language, and that the words we use carry unconscious traces of our early histories of love, suffering and desire. Suggesting that infants unconsciously symbolize and that a continuous circulation of unconscious affects—the transference—prevails in all language-based relations, her findings challenge assumptions about autism, autobiography, linguistics, literacy, pedagogy and therapy.

Dolto’s own corpus—a rich archive blending the personal and professional—demonstrates this, with echoes between Dolto’s constructs about the child and her own challenging childhood. This fascinating book will not only introduce the work of Françoise Dolto to many readers, but will be a valuable resource for all psychoanalytic researchers and theorists interested in childhood, language and identity.

chapter 1|19 pages

Subject

chapter 2|24 pages

Filiation

chapter 3|23 pages

Family

chapter 4|23 pages

Listening

chapter 5|23 pages

Reading

chapter 6|25 pages

Speaking

chapter 7|25 pages

Writing

chapter 8|24 pages

Phoneme

chapter 9|23 pages

Passivity

chapter 10|16 pages

Legacy