ABSTRACT

What is it to listen? How do we hear? How do we allow meanings to emerge between each other?

'This book is about what Freud called "freely" or "evenly suspended attention", a form of listening, a kind of receptive incomprehension, which is fundamental and mandatory for the practice of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy. The author steps outside the usual parameters of psychoanalytic writing and explores how works of art and literature which elicit and require such listening began to appear in Europe, in abundance, from the late eighteenth-century onwards.

Uncertainties, Mysteries, Doubts is a timely reminder, in the present era of audit and manualisation, of some of psychoanalysis's deep and living cultural roots. It hopes- by immersing the reader in the emotional, critical and contextual worlds of some artists and poets of Romanticism- to help psychotherapists, psychoanalysts, and counsellors in the endless challenge of staying open to their clients and patients, faced as we all are, therapists and clients alike, by multiple pressures to knowledgeable closure.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|29 pages

Psychoanalysis and Romanticism

Crisis, mourning and the mysteries of the ordinary

chapter 2|26 pages

The analytic attitude

An overview

chapter 3|31 pages

Goya and the dream of Enlightenment

chapter 4|25 pages

Hölderlin, Novalis, word without end

chapter 5|25 pages

Baudelaire and the malaise of modernity

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion