"Freud famously had one foot in fin de siecle Vienna and the other in the world of his fellow Jews. His ambivalence about the gap between the Greco-Christian intellectual tradition of secular Vienna and his own Rabbinic tradition has been amply explored and documented. In this rich and original book, Aron and Henik bring these issues into the present. In keeping with relational and post-modern precepts, their effort is dialogic and intertextual; that is, it is not about Freud’s dilemma, but rather about exploring and extending contemporary mutual influences. Brilliant and enlightening, this book represents a wide and impressive spectrum of scholarship and will be of great value to anyone interested in the interface between Judaism, psychoanalysis and culture. So, what’s not to like?"

- Edgar Levenson, MD Fellow Emeritus, Training and Supervisory Analyst and Faculty, William Alanson White Institute,

"Lewis Aron and Libby Henik have edited a fresh and intellectually challenging collection of essays. Each contributor has original insights into the history and practice of psychoanalysis, the fascinating question of Freud’s Jewishness, and the role of psychoanalysis in modern Jewish self-understanding.”

- Susannah Heschel, Eli Black Professor of Jewish Studies, Dartmouth College,

"The editors of the thought-provoking book Answering a Question With a Question: Contemporary Psychoanalysis and Jewish Thought seek to look beyond Freud’s own Jewish heritage to an in-depth study of Judaism and Jewish studies as the foundation of psychoanalytic principles. The study and practice of psychoanalysis share a deep connection with the study and practice of Judaism. Although Freud’s concern was that the relationship between psychoanalysis and Judaism would lead to the demise of psychoanalysis, Lew Aron and Libby Henik set out to demonstrate how fundamentally entwined psychoanalysis is with Judaism... The answer to a question and the solution to a problem can come from a number of places. However many times a solution is offered, we may reject or obscure our understanding. Like the religious man and the patient in analysis, the reader must make his or her own meaning of the experience. The essays collected here provide a glimpse of two historic traditions. Through inquiry and exploration of the inner and outer world, both share that fundamental human desire to make meaning out of chaos and to bring a deeper understanding to what it means to be human.''

- Michael B. Donner, PsycCritiques

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“Aron and Henik have assembled 14 thoughtful, well-researched essays, some of them pathbreaking, on the historical and intellectual imbrication of Jewish thought and modern psychoanalysis. . . . Particularly rich is the grouping on biblical commentary, which includes essays on the relation to psychoanalysis of rabbinic exegesis, Midrashic tradition, and biblical narrative. . . . This book will interest anyone concerned with the intellectual and cultural history of psychoanalysis and its implications for further speculation and therapy. Highly recommended.”

- M. Uebel, University of Texas, CHOICE (December 2010)

In the Jewish tradition, it is incumbent upon every generation to attempt to find meaning in its history. Meaning is co-created within the context of the subjective field of a meeting of minds. Psychoanalysis, in some respects like the Jewish tradition from which it emerged, represents a body of thought about man’s relation to himself and to others, and laces great value on the influence of memory, narrative, and history in creating meaning within the dyadic relationship of analyst and patient. In Answering a Question with a Question, editors Aron and Henik have brought together an international collection of contemporary scholars and clinicians to address the interface and the mutual influence of Jewish thought and modern psychoanalysis.
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Acknowledgement. Preface. Introduction. 1. HISTORICAL CONTEXT. Psychoanalysis and Judaism in Context. 2. CLINICAL PRESENTATION. The Jew for Jesus and Other Analytic Explorations of God. Dreams and Authoritative Knowledge: Bridging Judaism and Psychoanalysis. Holding the Mourner: Jewish Ritual through a Psychoanalytic Lens. Hearing “Thou Shall Not Kill” When All the Evidence is to the Contrary: Psychoanalysis, Enactment, and Jewish Ethics. 3. BIBLICAL COMMENTARY. A Freudian and a Kleinian Reading of the Midrash on the Garden of Eden Narrative. Transformations in the ‘Mental Apparatus of Dreaming’ as Depicted in the Biblical Story of Joseph. ‘Let Me see That Good Land:’ the Story of a Human Life. Rebecca’s Veil: A Weave of Conflict and Agency. 4. THEORETICAL PAPERS. “Demand a Speaking Part!”: The Character of the Jewish Father. The Problem of Desire: Psychoanalysis as a Jewish Wisdom Tradition. “Going Out to Meet You, I Found You Coming Toward me”:Transformation in Jewish Mysticism and Contemporary Psychoanalysis. ‘Foreignness is the Quality Which the Jews and One’s Own Instincts Have in Common’: Anti-Semitism, Identity and the Other. A Burning World, An Absent God:Midrash, Hermeneutics, and Relational Psychoanalysis. Contributors. Index.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781618112996
Publisert
2013-10-03
Utgiver
Academic Studies Press
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
424

Biografisk notat

Lewis Aron is the Director of the New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. He is the author of A Meeting of Minds: Mutuality in Psychoanalysis (The Analytic Press, 1996). Libby Henik LCSW, is in private practice in New York and New Jersey.