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El. knyga: Managed Lives: Psychoanalysis, inner security and the social order: Psychoanalysis and the Administrative Task

(Roehampton University, UK)
  • Formatas: 264 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Oct-2013
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134745456
  • Formatas: 264 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Oct-2013
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134745456

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An inherent tension exists in the history of psychoanalysis and its applications between the concepts of freedom and security. In Managed Lives, this tension is explored from the point of view of therapeutic experience. Set against the background of Freuds contested legacy, the book examines ways of managing oneself under psychiatric supervision, in the analytic encounter and in the emotional and moral contexts of everyday life.

Through a series of detailed case studies Steven Groarke addresses therapeutic experience as a formation of managed society, examining the work of Donald Winnicott on types of management, Colin Murray Parkes on bereavement and Anthony Giddens on the sociological appropriation of psychoanalysis. Managed Lives forms an original critical analysis of contemporary managerial culture and its self-reflexive project as well as presenting the idea of management as a source of inner security and vital morality. Presented in three parts, the book addresses:











The Criterion of Maturity





The Reflexive Norm





The Managed Society

Together, the books arguments provide a fresh and challenging perspective on post-Freudian uses of faith, the risks of critical rationality and the difficulties of living an ethical life under modern conditions.

Managed Lives is ideal for academics and research students working on psychoanalytic studies, social theory and mental health studies as well as students and trainees taking courses in psychotherapy, counselling, social work and health and social care.

Recenzijos

"This is a difficult book, dense with learned references, and I have certainly not done it justice by the simplified overview I have attempted here. Few readers will be familiar with all three of Groarkes thinkers and it serves as a valuable introduction and commentary on their thought."- David M. Black, The International Journal of Psychoanalysis

"Managed Lives not only provides an excellent overview of the relationship between psychoanalysis and governmentality, but furthermore, suggests a conceptual framework that could help guide ethical living at a time in which institutions of social control are commonly perceived as being finished (Deleuze,1992: 4). That is, Managed Lives offers a way of thinking about the regulation of life in a progressive and potentially transformative manner." Megan Clinch, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, UK, for The British Sociological Association

Preface ix
Acknowledgements xiii
PART I The criterion of maturity
1(78)
1 The Winnicottian typology of management
10(21)
The Freudian critique of culture
11(4)
The primary maternal frame
15(5)
Catastrophic disillusionment
20(4)
Social management
24(7)
2 Reclamation and the unthinkable
31(28)
The failure--dissociation model
32(3)
Therapy as an act of faith
35(4)
The redress of psychoanalysis
39(5)
The exigency of return
44(5)
The paradox of reclamation
49(2)
Holding
51(8)
3 Society's permanent task
59(20)
Revaluation of the value of war
60(3)
The calculus of security
63(4)
The antisocial imagination
67(7)
Leave-taking
74(5)
PART II The reflexive norm
79(70)
4 Norms and facts
84(23)
Communities of care
84(5)
Rules of method
89(8)
The Durkheimian norm
97(3)
Social medicine and health surveys
100(7)
5 Illness and identity
107(19)
Needs and norms
108(2)
Family-centred model of treatment
110(7)
Awareness that something is wrong
117(3)
A duty to the dead
120(6)
6 Vulnerability and trauma
126(23)
The predictive--preventive strategy
127(4)
The calculation of risk
131(4)
Traumatic grief
135(7)
The case of Henry
142(7)
PART III The managed society
149(61)
7 Basic security
154(28)
Social facts and reflexive norms
155(6)
The crisis of trust
161(4)
The social logic of identity
165(6)
Faith and knowledge
171(4)
Normative orders of conduct
175(7)
8 The regulated life
182(28)
Coping with anxiety
184(5)
The narrative frame of reference
189(6)
Utopian realism
195(5)
The re-moralization of the social
200(10)
Conclusion: The difficult task 210(8)
References 218(21)
Index 239
Steven Groarke is a reader in Social Theory at the University of Roehampton, a psychoanalyst of the British Psycho-Analytical Society and a member of the International Psychoanalytical Association. He currently works in private practice in London.