ABSTRACT

Psychoanalytic Perspectives on the Films of Ingmar Bergman presents a contemporary Freudian-Lacanian assessment of this classic director. This collection is the first to bring together this unique psychological perspective on Bergman’s work.

While Bergman and his films have been written about throughout the decades, until now there has not been a collection anthologizing Freudian-Lacanian perspectives on his work. Vanessa Sinclair brings together an international community of scholars and practicing psychoanalysts – some of whom are also filmmakers – to reflect on Bergman’s films, life, and work in philosophical, historical, and cultural contexts. They assess individual films in depth, compare multiple films, and focus on Bergman’s life and work in a cultural context. This book includes chapters on seminal films including Persona and The Silence.

Psychoanalytic Perspectives on the Films of Ingmar Bergman will be essential reading for academics and students of film studies, psychoanalytic theory, and Lacan, and of great interest to psychoanalysts and psychotherapists.

chapter 1|11 pages

The People Eaters Are Having a Great Feast

Some Reflections on Ingmar Bergman's Hour of the Wolf

chapter 4|23 pages

Island Earth

Bergman, Brahe, and the Many Suns

chapter 5|30 pages

The Truth about The Silence

Ingmar Bergman's Masterpiece about the World

chapter 6|6 pages

Three Sisters

Sibling Knots in Bergman's Cries and Whispers

chapter 7|7 pages

The Seventh Seal

Bergman and the Frenchmen

chapter 8|21 pages

Serpentine Conceptual Autophagia

Lesbian Contrapuntal Dialectics in Persona and The Silence

chapter 9|12 pages

The Father(s) in Moses and Monotheism and Fanny and Alexander

A Closer Look at Isak Jacobi, the Jewish Magical Savior

chapter 10|25 pages

Prolegomena to Persona

As Existential Psychoanalysis

chapter 11|26 pages

Beyond Silence

On the Absence of God in the Films of Ingmar Bergman