ABSTRACT

In this book, international psychoanalytic writers address the question ‘What do Women Want Today?’ from a variety of lenses, bringing into focus the creative, resilient forces shown by women in their multiple social and psychological tasks.

The book reviews classic psychoanalytic theories about the feminine within a new cultural context. It challenges hegemonic gender prejudices and discusses new conceptions that do not pathologize ‘different’ lifestyles and family configurations. With chapters by leading, international thinkers in the field, this book explores how to think about new feminine scenarios, gender identities, gender dynamics, motherhood, and desire, in light of modern psychoanalytic theories. In presenting how these changing contemporary notions of the feminine challenge classic psychoanalytic theory and practice, this book will compel both training and experienced analysts to think about new psychoanalytic theories and engage with their own prejudices regarding changing notions of the feminine.

Offering ideas relevant to psychoanalysis, sociology, gender studies, psychology, and activism, this book will be of great interest to professionals, teachers and students in addition to any with an interest in psychoanalytic theory and women’s studies.

part II|40 pages

Current theories about the feminine

chapter 3|16 pages

Liberating “female” from “femininity”

Helene Deutsch and the past to Dianne Elise and the present

part IV|22 pages

Psychoanalysis in the community

chapter 10|10 pages

Opening space for women to dream and symbolize when facing misogyny

The need for an active bystander witness

chapter 11|8 pages

What do women want?

Let our voices be heard

part V|29 pages

Contemporary feminine scenarios

chapter 12|11 pages

The maternal-feminine

Scenarios in transformation psychoanalysis and gender perspectives

chapter 13|16 pages

Self-agency in the feminine

What females need today