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<titleInfo>
<title>Literature and psychoanalysis:</title>
<subTitle>the question of reading, otherwise</subTitle>
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<name type="Personal Name" authority="">
<namePart>Felman, Shoshana.</namePart>
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<publisher>Johns Hopkins University Press</publisher>
<dateIssued>c1982</dateIssued>
<issuance>monographic</issuance>
<edition></edition>
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<extent>508 p. ; 22 cm.</extent>
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<note>The relationship between literature and psychoanalysis has never been one of equals. Traditional (particularly in American tradition), literature has been relegated to the position of foil for its more abstract counterpart—a mere body of language to be explained through the theoretical authority of psychoanalysis and, through its need to be interpreted, to add justification anjd pretige to Freudian theory.

Such a relationship has always bothered literary critics—who feel that psychoanalysis refuses to even to recognize literature as such—and, of late, it has begun to both some scholars of psychoanalysis, as well. This volume proposes a fundamental reorientation of the relationship between literature and psychoanalysis, arguing that neither discipline dominates the othr. Instead, the contributors assert that the subjects traverse each other's boundaries and that their relationship is one of give and take.</note>
<subject authority=""><topic>Psychoanalysis and literature</topic></subject>
<classification>150.195</classification><identifier type="isbn">0801827531</identifier><location>
<physicalLocation>Transformatio Library Bandung Theological Seminary</physicalLocation>
<shelfLocator>150.195 Fel l</shelfLocator>
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<sublocation>Non Fiction</sublocation>
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