A Child Is Being Killed

aw_product_id: 
41104337068
merchant_image_url: 
merchant_category: 
Books
search_price: 
18.99
book_author_name: 
Serge Leclaire
book_type: 
Paperback
publisher: 
Stanford University Press
published_date: 
01/03/1998
isbn: 
9780804731416
Merchant Product Cat path: 
Books > Politics, Society & Education > Psychology > Psychological theory & schools of thought > Psychoanalytical theory / Freudian psychology
specifications: 
Serge Leclaire|Paperback|Stanford University Press|01/03/1998
Merchant Product Id: 
9780804731416
Book Description: 
The powerful thesis of this book is that in order to achieve full selfhood we must all repeatedly and endlessly kill the phantasmatic image of ourselves instilled in us by our parents. We must all combat what the author calls "primary narcissism," a projection of the child our parents wanted. This idea-that each of us carries as a burden an unconscious secret of our parents, a hidden desire that we are made to live out but that we must kill in order to "be born"-touches on some of the fundamental issues of psychoanalytic theory. Around it, the author builds an intricate analysis of the relation between primary narcissism and the death drive. Each of the book's five chapters begins with one or more case studies drawn from the author's clinical experience as a psychoanalyst. In these studies he links his central concern-the image of the child created by the unconscious desire of the parents-to other issues, such as the question of love, the concept of the subject, and the death drive. In the penultimate chapter, on transference, the author challenges the commonplace understanding of the analyst's impassivity. What does such impassivity imply, especially in the context of a "transferential love" between a female patient and a male analyst? In replying to this question, the author forcefully reassesses the relation of psychoanalysis to femininity, to the question "What does a woman want?" Serge Leclaire's overarching thesis leads to a provocative rereading of the Oedipal configuration. Leclaire suggests that he is inhabited, pursued, haunted, and debilitated by the child who should have died in order that Oedipus might have been born into life.

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