1st Edition

Clinical Lessons on Life and Madness Dostoevsky's Characters

By Heitor O'Dwyer de Macedo Copyright 2019
    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    The author of Clinical Lessons on Life and Madness: Dostoevsky’s Characters draws on Dostoevsky's universe to illuminate psychoanalytic theory and practice. Using Dostoevsky’s characters as case studies, the author discusses the various psychoanalytic concepts they embody, and shows how these insights can be applied to therapeutic understanding.

     

    By considering the people who populate Dostoevsky’s world as personifying a whole spectrum of human possibilities and modes of relation, Heitor O'Dwyer de Macedo’s discussion of the characters – including those from Notes from Underground, Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov – allows him to explore fundamental issues constitutive of clinical practice, such as trauma, fantasy, perversion and madness.

     

    Clinical Lessons on Life and Madness will provide an important resource for psychoanalysts with an interest in literature, as well as students of literature seeking a psychoanalytic interpretation.

    Table of Contents

     

    Preamble

     

    Chapter 1 Notes from Underground

    Chapter 2 Crime and Punishment

    Chapter 3 The Double

    Chapter 4 The Idiot

    Chapter 5 Demons

    Chapter 6 The Brothers Karamazov

    Chapter 7 Women in Dostoyevsky’s Fiction

    Chapter 8 The Grand Inquisitor

    References

     

    Biography

    Heitor O’Dwyer de Macedo is a French psychoanalyst and former theatre director of Brazilian origin, based in Paris. He has worked both in an institutional context, with psychotic patients, and in private practice.

    Located in the space between the raw reality of treating psychosis and Dostoevsky’s powerful work, this book takes us to the intersection of unnamable anguish where the characters encounter the unconscious. Determined to delve into the spheres that Freud, focused on neurosis, left unexplored - trauma and madness - Heitor O’Dwyer de Macedo, with his love of literature and the acute perception of an exceptional clinician, takes us across zones filled with the cumbersome hatred of the dead, to show us that these zones can open unto love and desire. This book is essential for clinical practice, and will delight all those who find the unconscious endlessly fascinating.

    Anna Angelopoulos, psychoanalyst, anthropologist, President of the Fédération des Ateliers de Psychanalyse (Federation of Psychoanalytic Workshops), Paris; renowned researcher in the oral tradition of storytelling.

     

    In this book, psychoanalyst Heitor O’Dwyer de Macedo shows us that Dostoevsky, the  brilliant clinician, describes psychic processes that Freud would only formulate decades later. In simple language, de Macedo also points out that Dostoevsky’s novels deal essentially with the desire to establish vibrant relationships with others, without letting ideology replace lost religion.

     Michel Eltchaninoff, philosopher, editor in chief of Philosophie Magazine

     

    With his considerable clinical experience and vast knowledge of literature, the author ponders the mysteries of the human soul as they are revealed by Dostoevsky. Psychoanalysis and literature are both enriched as a result. We have here what Sartre would call the work of a master.

    Ronaldo Lima Lins, writer, professor emeritus of literature at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro