
Genius After Psychoanalysis
Freud and Lacan
- 224 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Genius After Psychoanalysis
Freud and Lacan
About this book
Develops a new psychoanalytic theory of genius, a concept that is often invoked and pervasive in popular culture but which is rarely scrutinized in depth. In the absence of this scrutiny, genius has come to be understood as exceptional talent or intelligence-an elitist notion. Genius After Psychoanalysis intervenes in this debate by offering a new account of genius. Drawing on the work of Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan, K. Daniel Cho argues that genius is not exceptional talent or intelligence but is related to and illuminated by the psychological concept of sublimation, where the unpleasures that arise when our intellectual products fail become themselves pleasurable. Beginning with a close examination of Freud's work on Leonardo da Vinci, Cho analyzes film, art, our relationship to nature, politics, group psychology, love, and philosophy to demonstrate that genius, far from an elitist notion, is universally available through a different approach to ideas of imperfection, disappointment, and failure. Genius After Psychoanalysis is a bold new intervention on a culturally central but understudied topic.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Halftitle Page
- Dedication Page
- Title Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Economic Problem of Genius
- Part One Critique of Pure Pleasure
- Part Two The Trouble with Objects
- Part Three Group Psychology and the Analysis of Genius
- Conclusion: Drive within the Limits of Death Alone
- Notes
- Index
- Volumes in the Series
- Imprint