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Tables of Contents for The Politics of Psychoanalysis
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Acknowledgements
x
 
Preface to the Second Edition
xi
 
Introduction
1
1
Fundamentals of psychoanalysis
2
4
Evaluating psychoanalysis
6
4
The politics of psychoanalysis
10
7
PART I The Freudian Base
17
66
The Discovery of the Unconscious
19
20
Repression and the unconscious
21
4
Instincts and their vicissitudes
25
4
Life, narcissism and death
29
4
The structure of the mind
33
6
Social Repression
39
23
Phylogeny and ontogeny: renunciation of the instincts
42
4
Sexuality and the Oedipus complex
46
7
Femininity, misogyny, patriarchy
53
7
The prospects for change
60
2
Analysis
62
21
From anxiety of defence
63
5
The prospects for cure
68
8
The mechanisms of therapy
76
7
PART II Repression and the Unconscious
83
70
Instincts and Objects
85
34
Ego psychology and adaptation
87
9
Object relations theory and the relational critique of biological psychoanalysis
96
9
The maturational environment
105
3
Mothering the true self: the contribution of Winnicott
108
4
Towards intersubjectivity
112
4
The limits of object relations theory
116
3
Splitting the Mind
119
34
Envy and destructiveness: the paranoid world of Melanie Klein
120
8
Splitting and reparation
128
10
Splitting and culture: Lacan
138
15
PART III Psychoanlaysis and Politics
153
88
Political Psychoanalysis
155
41
The Reichian revolution
157
6
Eros and civilisation
163
12
Alternatives to libertarianism: revisionism
175
4
Restructuring relationships
179
11
The politics of identity and the psychoanalysis of excess
190
6
Feminist Psychoanalysis
196
45
Object relations theory: the recovery of mothering
201
5
Girls and boys in feminist object relations theory
206
6
Changing parenting
212
3
In the name of Lacan
215
4
The complex phallus
219
7
The body and the word: post-Lacanian feminists
226
7
Recognising difference: post-Oedipal theory
233
5
Conclusion
238
3
PART IV Therapy and Cure
241
70
Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy
243
32
Against psychotherapy
245
6
Analysis and withdrawal
251
3
Relative goals
254
3
Psychotherapeutic cure, or `promises, promises'
257
5
Positive aims for psychoanalysis
262
9
Interrogating power
271
4
The Power of the Analyst
275
36
Transference and interpretation
276
10
Schizoid phenomena and human relationships
286
4
Mothering therapy
290
8
The image of the analyst
298
13
Conclusion: The Politics of Psychoanalysis
311
7
Bibliography
318
7
Index
325