Surveying menstruation and Secondary Amenorrhea (SA) principally from a psychoanalytic perspective, with sociocultural, historical, political and religious angles also examined, Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Women, Menstruation and Secondary Amenorrhea draws secondary amenorrhea out of the shadows of its menstruating counterpart, and explores how narratives of womanhood and statehood dominate. Chapters on blood ideology and war amenorrhea, on Freud's treatment of Emma Eckstein and on the psycho-mythology of Pygmalion, present the reader with visions beyond patriarchy towards more thoughtful ideas on the feminine, challenging assumptions about gender, identity and what is deemed "good" for women. Rich in clinical examples, the book locates menses and their cessation at the heart of personal experience and examines psychosomatic phenomena, the link between psyche and body and the value of interpretation. From the author's own analysis to a variety of cases linked to hysteria, anorexia, stress, trauma, abuse, helplessness and hopelessness, individual stories and narratives are sensitively recovered and carefully revealed.
This refreshing example of multi-layered research and psychoanalytic enquiry by a new, female writer will be of great interest to psychologists, psychotherapists, healthcare and social work professionals and readers of gender studies, history, politics and literature.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Andrew Samuels, Former Professor of Analytical Psychology, University of Essex
"What does it mean when a woman of menstruating age stops bleeding and what does it matter to her or to us? Working through anthropology, myth and literature, Danielle Redland links the cessation of menses to unconscious registers suggesting that there is a communication of the psyche that looks to the body to find expression; she shows how these themes recur not only in cultural and historical narratives world-wide but also in examples she gives from the consulting room.
In this highly original and important text, Redland offers a psychoanalytic perspective on Ovid's Metamorphosis and George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion while also examining the role of the male practitioner - analyst, doctor or both - in a study of Freud's failed treatment of Emma Eckstein. In a brand-new take on the dynamic between body and mind, Danielle Redland presses the question: is such an opposition still viable? The result is a ground-breaking analysis of what this means for women, symptoms and psychoanalysis itself."
Christopher Hauke, Jungian analyst, Senior Lecturer at Goldsmiths, University of London. Author of the Routledge book, Jung and the Postmodern. The Interpretation of Realities.








