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Introduction to Psychoanalysis

ENGL 102.401
also offered as: COML 245
MW 5-6:30pm

The course is designed to introduce to the clinical, theoretical, and cultural history of psychoanalysis through readings of texts by the most important psychoanalytic writers from the late nineteenth century to the present day. They include Sigmund Freud, Sándor Ferenczi, Carl Jung, Sabina Spielrein, Melanie Klein, Heinz Kohut, Jacques Lacan, D. W. Winnicott, John Bowlby, Juliet Mitchell, Stephen Mitchell, and Christopher Bollas.  These readings suggest that psychoanalysis offers powerful ways of understanding how all of us think, feel, and behave, both as individuals and in relation to other people and larger communities.  The theory and the practice of psychoanalysis are based on the importance of unconscious processes. We will study the complex ways in which those processes affect our lived experience in childhood development and family relationships, in our wishes, dreams, and fantasies, in our experiences of work, play, love, sex, trauma, and loss, and in our creative, spiritual, and political strivings.  Because the course aims to link the academic and the clinical, it is team-taught by a professor of English and a psychoanalyst who will introduce you to the breadth, variety, and dynamism of psychoanalytic ideas and techniques.  In order to stress the interdisciplinary nature of psychoanalysis, we will read a number of literary, historical, philosophical, and anthropological works that have relevance to the psychoanalytic exploration of the human condition.  We will try to show how effective psychoanalytic ideas are in bridging a wide variety of disciplines in the humanities, the social sciences, and the natural sciences, including recent developments in neuropsychoanalysis. Students from all disciplines will find in the class illuminating links between psychoanalysis and their primary fields of study.


fulfills requirements
Sector 1: Theory and Poetics of the Standard Major
Sector 6: 20th Century Literature of the Standard Major
Sector III: Arts & Letters of the College's General Education Curriculum