Book Cover

Towards Reading Freud: Self-Creation in Milton, Wordsworth, Emerson, and Sigmund Freud

Contributor(s): Edmundson, Mark (Author)

ISBN: 9780226184616

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Binding Types:

$28.00
$40.95 (Final Price)
$39.75 (100+ copies: $39.00)
List/retail price:
$28.00
- +
Buy

Pub Date: September 1, 2007

Dewey: 821.009353

LCCN: 2007015646

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Index, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.41" H x 8.92" L x 6.16" W ( 0.52 lbs) 184 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: When most critics were using Freudian theories to study literature, Mark Edmundson read Freud's writings as literature alongside the works of poets grappling with the heady issues of desire, narcissism, and grief. Towards Reading Freud weighs the psychoanalyst's therapeutic directives against his more visionary impulses in a magisterial comparative study of such writers as Shakespeare, Wordsworth, Emerson, and Keats. Cross-fertilizing psychological doctrine with the literary canon, this richly informed volume forges a new understanding of Freud's writings on the self.

"Marvelous. . . . Edmundson's book offers an extraordinary challenge both to practicing analysts and to a scholarly community which all too uncomplainingly inhabits and reinforces the Freudian paradigm of interpretation. Edmundson reinvents an adventurous and dissident Freud as an antidote to . . . weary psychoanalytic commonplaces."-Malcolm Bowie, Raritan

"This book takes a distinguished place in the ongoing effort to recontextualize Freud by stressing the literary, rather than the scientific roots and character of his theory."-Virginia Quarterly Review

Brief description: Mark Edmundson is the Daniels Family Distinguished Teaching Professor of Romantic Poetry and Literary Theory at the University of Virginia. He is the author of numerous books, including The Death of Freud and Why Read?.

Review Quotes: "To deflate exaggerated praise on dustcovers is a critic's pleasure. This time, however, I join the praise."--John Neubauer "Comparative Literary Studies"

Worth Considering
Product successfully added to cart!