This introduction to psychoanalytic theory explores the birth of psychoanalysis and gives an account of fundamental psychoanalytic concepts.
This updated
- Explores the birth of psychoanalysis, taking the reader step by step through Freud's original ideas and how they evolved - Gives an account of fundamental psychoanalytic concepts - Discusses the different schools of psychoanalysis that have emerged since Freud - Illustrates the wider applications of psychoanalytic ideas across film, literature and politics.
Psychoanalytic theory remains hugely important for understanding the mind and human behavior. It provides a rich source of ideas for therapeutic practice while offering dramatic insights for the study of culture and society.
Written by an authority on psychoanalysis, this book is essential reading for trainees in counseling and psychotherapy, as well as for students across the arts, humanities and social sciences. The 2nd edition includes up-to-date material and develops the book's coverage of social and cultural implications of psychoanalysis.
Stephen Frosh has worked at Birkbeck from 1979, first in the School of Psychology and since 2008 in the Department of Psychosocial Studies, of which he was a founding member and first Head of Department. From 1982 until 2000 he worked part time at Birkbeck and part time as a clinical psychologist in the NHS. Throughout the 1990s he was Consultant Clinical Psychologist and (from 1996) Vice Dean in the Child and Family Department of the Tavistock Clinic, London. His academic interests are in the applications of psychoanalysis to social issues; gender, culture and ‘race’; and psychosocial studies. He was Pro-Vice-Master of Birkbeck from 2003 to 2017, first with responsibility for Learning and Teaching, then for Research and then for Internationalisation
Really good book on various ideas in psychoanalytic theory. Doesn't cover everything, but what it does cover it gives in good depth. Chapters are short and digestable and is much more readable than some other psychodynamic texts. Would recommend to anyone looking to learn about psychoanalysis with no real background to the discipline.