1st Edition

What Shakespeare Teaches Us About Psychoanalysis A Local Habitation and a Name

By Dorothy T. Grunes, Jerome M Grunes Copyright 2014
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    Using Shakespeare's work to expand our understanding of what it is to be human, this book of applied psychoanalysis furthers the study of Shakespeare, literary theory, dramatic arts, and psychoanalytic theory. It is also accessible to readers, theatre-goers and those who have an interest in the human condition. With intellectual rigour, and close textual analysis, it values the insights of many creative writers such as T. S. Eliot, James Joyce, W. H. Auden, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, as well as Sigmund Freud, Heinz Kohut and D.W. Winnicott. For the clinician, this book introduces new theories in psychoanalysis based upon the text and clinical experience. Psychoanalysts looking at literature are at a disadvantage, as the value system belongs solely to the realm of literary theory proper. Literary theory, in turn, often finds what the scholar seeks. It is not surprising that this potentially enriching combination of literary theory and psychoanalysis has had difficulty sustaining its relevance and tends towards reductionism.

    Preface , On drama and psychoanalysis , The metaphysics and metapsychology of evil in Othello , Mothers in Shakespeare—absent and present , Disguise and disavowal in The Merchant of Venice and Romeo and Juliet , Visions of self in Julius Caesar , Madness and the death of self in Titus Andronicus , The Future of an Illusionist , What Shakespeare teaches us about aging parents and their adult children in King Lear , Afterword

    Biography

    Dorothy T Grunes