ABSTRACT

Many texts about anxiety are based either in the philosophical tradition or within the medical model under the guise of discussions about post-traumatic stress disorder. In the case of fantasy, however, the usual sources of discussion are in literary and cultural criticism. Bringing the two together offers the scope for a book with an original theme. The balance between clinical ideas, philosophical ideas and literary sources is aimed at keeping both potential audiences interested. Clinicians may find the idea of thinking 'dialectically' helpful with their patients. Although this approach is implied in both Freud and Lacan, this is the first book to put dialectics 'centre stage' in terms of understanding the patient's discourse. As far as general readers are concerned, most texts on fantasy do not 'home in' on the contribution of anxiety to the constantly changing content of fantasy.This book offers a new approach to the problem of anxiety. It suggests that our fantasies (both public and private) offer the key to understanding our anxieties and vice versa.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter One|18 pages

Variations on a theme of negation

chapter Two|15 pages

Other minds, other worlds

chapter Three|21 pages

Working without a safety net

chapter Four|18 pages

What happens when the plot gets lost

chapter Five|26 pages

Gothic tales and other stories

chapter Six|27 pages

I believe...

chapter Seven|19 pages

The meaning of fantasy and anxiety

chapter Eight|16 pages

Fantasy terminable and interminable