ABSTRACT

Illusion, Disillusion, and Irony in Psychoanalysis explores and develops the role of illusion and daydream in everyday life, and in psychoanalysis. Using both clinical examples and literary works, idealised illusions and the inevitable disillusion that is met when reality makes an impact, are carefully explored.

Idealised phantasies which involve a timeless universe inevitably lead to disillusion in the face of reality which introduces an awareness of time, ageing, and eventually death. If the illusions are recognised as phantasy rather than treated as fact, the ideal can be internalised as a symbol and serve as a measure of excellence. Steiner shows that the cruelty of truth needs to be recognised, as well as the deceptive nature of illusion, and that relinquishing omnipotence is a critical and difficult developmental task that is relived in analysis.

Illusion, Disillusion, and Irony in Psychoanalysis will be of great use to the psychoanalyst or psychotherapist seeking to understand the patient’s withdrawal into a phantasy world, and the struggle to allow the impact of reality.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|18 pages

The Garden of Eden Illusion

Finding and losing Paradise 1

chapter 2|20 pages

Learning from Milton

The dangerous gap between the real and the ideal 1

chapter 6|17 pages

The unbearability of being feminine 1

chapter 7|15 pages

The sympathetic imagination

Keats and the movement in and out of projective identification

chapter 9|14 pages

Learning from Don Quixote 1

chapter 10|13 pages

Reconciling phantasy and reality

The redeeming nature of irony 1