ABSTRACT

In Fratriarchy, Juliet Mitchell expands her ground-breaking theories on the sibling trauma and the Law of the Mother. Writing as a psychoanalytic practitioner, she shows what happens from the ground up when we use feminist questions to probe the psycho-social world and its lateral relations.

In this pivotal text, Mitchell argues that the mother’s prohibition of her toddler attacking a new or expected sibling is a rite of passage from infancy to childhood: this is a foundational force structuring our later lateral relationships and social practices. Throughout the volume, Mitchell chooses the term 'Fratriarchy' to show that, as well as the up-down axis of fathers and sons, there is also the side-to-side interaction of sisters and brothers and their social heirs. Making use both critically and affirmatively of Freud, Klein, Winnicott, Bion, Pontalis and others, Fratriarchy indicates how the collective social world matches the individual family world examined by established psychoanalysis. Decades on from Mitchell’s work on psychoanalysis and feminism which argued that feminism needed psychoanalysis to understand the position of women, Fratriarchy now asks psychoanalysis to take on board the developing practices and theories of global feminism.

This volume will be essential reading for analysts, psychotherapists, psychologists and anyone who wants to re-think the ubiquity of unconscious processes. It will also interest students and teachers of social theory, psychoanalysis, group analysis, gender studies and feminism.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part 1|75 pages

The Toddler's World

chapter Chapter 2|16 pages

Taking It like a Toddler

chapter Chapter 3|18 pages

From Toddling to Walking; from Speaking to Talking

part 2|75 pages

Three Theories

chapter Chapter 5|24 pages

Donald Winnicott

Narcissistic-Psychotic Development. Do Siblings Count?

chapter Chapter 6|22 pages

Using Wilfred Bion

The Social and Its Models

chapter Chapter 7|27 pages

Questioning Fraternity

J.-B. Pontalis – ‘Death-Work’ and Brother of the Above

chapter |5 pages

Epilogue to Part 2: The Social Child's World

Latency and No-Latency

part 3|48 pages

Fratriarchy

chapter Chapter 8|14 pages

Oedipal Sexual Difference

chapter Chapter 9|16 pages

Horizontal ‘Gender’ and Bisexuality

chapter Chapter 10|14 pages

Fratriarchy – Tomorrow, Today and Yesterday