Psychoanalysis and Women

Psychoanalysis and Women by Jean Baker Miller, published by Penguin Books on July 30, 1973, is a first edition that spans 415 pages. This collection features essays from sixteen prominent psychoanalysts who challenge Freud’s traditional, phallocentric perspective on women. The authors aim to provide a more nuanced understanding of the female experience by addressing and dispelling various myths, including those related to dependency and biological determinism.
Readers will find a comprehensive exploration of topics such as maternal instinct, childbearing, gender identity, and sexual identity. The essays also reflect on the representation of women in literature, contributing to a broader discourse on women’s roles and experiences. This book offers insights into psychoanalysis as it pertains to women today and highlights the ongoing struggle for a more fulfilling life.
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These essays by sixteen eminent psychoanalysts revise Freud’s long-standing, phallocentric view of women. The authors achieve a more realistic picture of the human female as they dispel myths about dependency, biological determinism, penis envy, and masochism. Their writings go on to explore the maternal instinct, childbearing, gender identity, and sexual identity and to comment on the role of women in literature. The result is a book that throws new light on psychoanalysis for women today and on women’s continuing struggle for a more fulfilling way of life.
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