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This book considers psychoanalysis as an ethical enterprise, both on the level of the individual in analytic psychotherapy, and on the level of society in the global struggle for human and civil rights. Hadar examines the struggle against the Israeli occupation of Palestinian lives from a Lacanian psychoanalytical perspective.
"Hadar's ambitious, captivating account of psychoanalysis and social issues uniquely combines the experiences of the clinician and the social activist. Informed by Lacanian and critical theory, Hadar defines the psychoanalytic project not in terms of the treatment of illness but as an ethical practice of recognizing injury, whether to the individual or the collective. The book will challenge both clinicians and academics to grapple with how each can engage the urgent question of how subjectivity can emerge from entrapment in victimization and injury and assume ethical responsibility, both in individual therapy and in social activism." - Jessica Benjamin, psychoanalyst, author of The Bonds of Love and Shadow of the Other
"Psychoanalysis and Social Involvement offers a manifesto for community mental health, weaving as it does, between the freeing of the individual and the freeing of community. It discusses the related issues on many levels, from the most abstract to the most practical and achieves both a unity of perspective and a diversity of interests. At times it creates powerful insights, while at others it engages gripping life stories. Uri Hadar's sense of justice is refreshing and his book should be read by all those who care for the mental health of individuals and society, especially in Israel and Palestine." - Eyad Sarraj, Founder and President of the Gaza Community Mental Health Program.
"No one writes more lucidly than Uri Hadar when encompassing the challenges and complexity of analytic psychotherapy. Drawing his insights from both Lacan and relational psychoanalysis, Hadar goes to the heart of the matter in raising social, ethical and political considerations when pondering the ties between the practice of psychotherapy and the nature of mental health. Written from within the Israeli-Palestinian context, this book is an invaluable resource for one of the most critical conversations of our time how to lead an ethical and healthy life in situations of continuous conflict. Few other books have quite the same potential for addressing the role of psychoanalytic thought and practice in troubled times." - Lynne Segal, author of Out of Time: The Pleasures & Perils of Ageing
Auteur
Uri Hadar is Professor of Psychology at Tel Aviv University, Israel, where he teaches an innovative course on the psychology of occupation. His research focuses on psychoanalysis and language and he has published two books on psychoanalytic psychotherapy as well as various articles on why we gesture when we speak, how the brain retrieves lexical information and how
these mechanisms are intrinsically related. He is also a member of PsychoactiveMental Health Professionals for Human Rights, which promotes the rights of Palestinians under Israeli occupation.
Contenu
Preface Introduction: Structure and Overview of the Book's Main Themes PART I: THE SUBJECT 1. Being a Subject 2. Subject to a Body 3. Psychotherapy and being a Subject - Basic Assumptions 4. Psychotherapy and being a Subject - Positions 5. Subject and Self PART II: INTERPRETATION AND ACTION 6. Enactment and Analycity 7. Speech as Action 8. Positions Revisited 9. Interpretation, Enactment and Ethics PART III: THE OTHER 10. Enactment and the Positioning of the Other 11. The Personal Other 12. The Subject and the Personal Other 13. From the Personal Other to the Other PART IV: THIRDNESS 14. The Specular Third 15. Orthogonality 16. Triangulation and Identification 17. The Otherness of the Other PART V: THE INJURY 18. The Injury 19. The Analytic Identification of the Injury 20. The Analyst's Recognition of the Injury 21. The Symmetrisation of the Injury 22. Transference and its Injuries PART VI: FROM THE ANALYTIC TO THE POST-COLONIAL 23. From the Other to the (Post)Colonial 24. Jessica Benjamin 25. Trauma and Memory, Shoah and Nakba PART VII: OCCUPATION AND ANALYTIC PSYCHOTHERAPY 26. Resistance 27. Violence 28. Reconciliation 29. Psychoanalytic Reconciliation PART VIII: ACTIVISM 30. Activism 31. Postness PART IX: PSYCHOLOGICAL ACTIVISM IN THE ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN ARENA 32. The Parents Circle Families Forum 33. The Mutual Acknowledgement Project 34. The Third in the Palestinian-Israeli Field 35. Psychoactive PART X: THERAPY AND POLITICS 36. Compartmentalization and Analycity 37. Political Talk in Analysis Epilogue: The Ethical and the True