Treatment in progress...

Case by Case

Webster Jamieson, Gherovici Patricia
Publication date 13/10/2026
EAN: 9781917651196
Availability Not yet published: 13/10/2026
Freud’s ‘talking cure’ and its offshoots are more widespread today than ever. But as the divisive issues of our time grow more urgent, a contentious question persists: must psychoanalysis remove itself from politics altogether in order to be effectiv... See full description
Attribute nameAttribute value
Common books attribute
PublisherMACK BOOKS
Page Count180
Languageen
AuthorWebster Jamieson, Gherovici Patricia
FormatPaperback / softback
Product typeBook
Publication date13/10/2026
Weight-
Dimensions (thickness x width x height)0.00 x 12.50 x 19.50 cm
Freud’s ‘talking cure’ and its offshoots are more widespread today than ever. But as the divisive issues of our time grow more urgent, a contentious question persists: must psychoanalysis remove itself from politics altogether in order to be effective? Or is it inherently political? Specific disagreements about how clinicians should or shouldn’t engage with imperialism, violence, race, and gender identity point to the broader question of where politics is situated in our psychic life. Is it on the periphery – a symptom or displacement – or right at the heart of the matter?In this timely book, psychoanalysts Patricia Gherovici and Jamieson Webster examine the vexed relationship between psychoanalysis and politics through a sequence of case studies, exploring the many ways in which the political enters the consulting room. Ranging from early cases confronting homosexuality and race to idiosyncratic analyses disentangling the legacies of state and colonial violence, the authors illuminate how the political shapes our relationships to power, normativity, and identity. These historic cases are prescient of the political dilemmas confronting us today. Rather than dismissing psychoanalysis as irrelevant or reducing it to a vehicle for political positions, Case by Case makes a galvanizing and challenging argument for what psychoanalysis can reveal about our political selves – and how it might transform them.