
Publication details
Year: 2010
Pages: 353-357
Series: Human Studies
Full citation:
, "An unholistic alliance" Human Studies 33, 2010, pp. 353-357
Abstract
As a psychoanalyst and philosopher whose work over the past 35 years has been centrally focused on rethinking psychoanalysis as a form of phenomenological inquiry (Stolorow et al. 2002), I looked forward with eager anticipation to delving into a volume aimed at illuminating the scientificity of psychoanalysis with the help of philosophical (primarily Husserlian) phenomenology. Reading Karlsson’s (2010/2004) new book, however, left me feeling sorely disappointed. The sources of my disappointment were prefigured in the two ways in which the book’s title, Psychoanalysis in a New Light, turned out to be misleading. First, the book is not about psychoanalysis as such; the book’s focus is largely narrowed to classical Freudian psychoanalysis, for the most part leaving out of account innovative developments in contemporary psychoanalysis, especially in North America. Second, the book does not cast even Freudian psychoanalysis in a new light at all; indeed, Karlsson leaves the entire edifice...
Cited authors
Publication details
Year: 2010
Pages: 353-357
Series: Human Studies
Full citation:
, "An unholistic alliance" Human Studies 33, 2010, pp. 353-357