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Book Cover
Book
Author Zaretsky, Eli.

Title Secrets of the soul : a social and cultural history of psychoanalysis / Eli Zaretsky
Edition First edition
Published New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 2004

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Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  150.19509 Zar/Sot  DUE 03-05-24
 W'PONDS  150.19509 Zar/Sot  AVAILABLE
 W'PONDS  150.19509 Zar/Sot  AVAILABLE
 W'PONDS  150.19509 Zar/Sot  AVAILABLE
Description xv, 429 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Contents Introduction : the ambiguous legacy of psychanalysis -- Pt. 1. Charismatic origins : the crumbling of the Victorian family system -- Ch. 1. The personal unconscious -- Ch. 2. Gender, sexuality, and personal life -- Ch. 3. Absorption and marginality -- Ch. 4. From paternal authority to narcissism -- Pt. 2. Fordism, Freudianism, and the threefold promise of modernity -- Ch. 5. The Great War and the Bolshevik revolution -- Ch. 6. Fordism, Freudianism, and modernity -- Ch. 7. Autonomy and resistance -- Ch. 8. The turn toward the mother -- Ch. 9. Fascism and the destruction of classical European analysis -- Pt. 3. From the psychology of authority to the politics of identity -- Ch. 10. The mother-infant relationship and the post-war welfare state -- Ch. 11. Charisma or rationalization? : U. S. psychoanalysis in the epoch of the Cold War -- Ch. 12. The 1960s, post-Fordism, and the culture of narcissism -- Epilogue : psychoanalysis in our time
Summary "Eli Zaretsky shows how Freud's teachings set the stage for the modernism of the 1920s and the sexual revolution of the 1960s. He takes psychoanalysis back to its roots and describes its close ties to the second industrial revolution, when Freud replaced the Enlightenments' idea of rational man with the concept of the unconscious - a switch that, with the advent of the Great War and the theory of anxiety, offered compelling explanations for the horrors of modern warfare."
"Zaretsky shows how psychoanalysis encouraged the idea of an individual life distinct from the family, persuading people to look inward rather than follow a path ordained by custom or birth (Henry Ford inadvertently supported Freud - he encouraged workers to locate their identities not in the family, or in the workplace, but in consumerism)... how psychoanalysis both hindered and emancipated women, homosexuals, and African Americans... how Freud's theories were welcomed in the United States because they fit with the American emphasis on the individual... how psychoanalysis led to the birth of other therapies and movements that, in many cases, replaced it."--BOOK JACKET
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages [345]-413) and index
Notes Originally published New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 2004
Subject Psychoanalysis -- History.
Psychoanalysis -- Social aspects -- History.
Psychoanalysis -- history.
Social Change -- history.
LC no. 2003066125
ISBN 0679446540 alkaline paper
Other Titles Social and cultural history of psychoanalysis