ABSTRACT

The author of Clinical Lessons on Life and Madness: Dostoevsky’s Characters draws on Dostoevsky's universe to illuminate psychoanalytic theory and practice. Using Dostoevsky’s characters as case studies, the author discusses the various psychoanalytic concepts they embody, and shows how these insights can be applied to therapeutic understanding.

 

By considering the people who populate Dostoevsky’s world as personifying a whole spectrum of human possibilities and modes of relation, Heitor O'Dwyer de Macedo’s discussion of the characters – including those from Notes from Underground, Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov – allows him to explore fundamental issues constitutive of clinical practice, such as trauma, fantasy, perversion and madness.

 

Clinical Lessons on Life and Madness will provide an important resource for psychoanalysts with an interest in literature, as well as students of literature seeking a psychoanalytic interpretation.

chapter |10 pages

Preamble

chapter 1|25 pages

Notes from Underground

chapter 2|63 pages

Crime and Punishment

chapter 3|9 pages

The Double

chapter 4|27 pages

The Idiot

chapter 5|49 pages

Demons

chapter 6|16 pages

The Brothers Karamazov

chapter 7|22 pages

Women in Dostoevsky’s fiction

chapter 8|16 pages

The Grand Inquisitor