ABSTRACT

In this compelling book, Anthony Elliott traces the rise of psychoanalysis from the Frankfurt School to postmodernism. Examining how pathbreaking theorists such as Adorno, Marcuse, Lacan and Lyotard have deployed psychoanalysis to politicise issues such as desire, sexuality, repression and identity, Elliott assesses the gains and losses arising from this appropriation of psychoanalysis in social theory and cultural studies.

Moving from the impact of the Culture Wars and recent Freud-bashing to contemporary debates in social theory, feminism and postmodernism, Elliott argues for a new alliance between sociological and psychoanalytic perspectives.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Imagination in the service of the new

part |33 pages

Pretext

chapter |29 pages

Social Theory since Freud

Traversing social imaginaries

part |21 pages

Pretext

chapter |18 pages

Situating Psychoanalysis in the Social Field

Culture wars, Freud-bashing, memory

part |34 pages

Pretext

chapter |31 pages

The Psychic Constitution of the Subject

Imagination, identification, primary repression

part |23 pages

Pretext

chapter |17 pages

Sexuality, Complexity, Anxiety

The encounter between psychoanalysis, feminism and postmodernism

part |38 pages

Pretext

chapter |21 pages

Psychoanalysis at Its Limits

Navigating the postmodern turn

chapter |13 pages

Social Theory, Psychoanalysis and the Politics of Postmodernity

Anthony Elliott talks with Sean Homer