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This pioneering volume brings together scholars and clinicians working at the intersection of Islam and psychoanalysis to explore both the connections that link these two traditions, as well as the tensions that exist between them.
Sommario
Foreword
Ian Parker
Introduction
Sabah Siddiqui
1. ‘The Unity in Human Sufferings’: Cultural Translatability in the Context of Arab Psychoanalytic Cultural Critique
Eva Tepest
2. Islam: A manifest or latent content?
Maryam Asl Zaker and Forough Edrissi
3. Representations of the Psyche and its dynamics in Islam: The Work of Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyah
Chiara Sebastiani
4. Politics of Secular Psychoanalysis in India: Hindu-Muslim as Religious and Political Identities in Sudhir Kakar’s Writing
Zehra Mehdi
5. Between Neutrality and Disavowal: Being Muslim Psychotherapists in India
Shifa Haq and Sabah Siddiqui
6. The Repressed Event of (Shi‘I) Islam: Psychoanalysis, the Trauma of Iranian Shi‘Ism and Feminine Revolt
Farshid Kazemi
7. Becoming Revolution: From Symptom to Act in the 2011 Arab Revolts
Nathan Gorelick
8. Decolonizing Psychoanalysis / Psychoanalyzing Islamophobia
Robert K. Beshara
9. Connectedness and dreams: Exploring the possibilities of communication across interpretive traditions
Julia Borossa
10. Islam, the new modern erotic
Gohar Homayounpour
11. Enduring Trouble: Striving to Think Anew
Amal Treacher Kabesh
Info autore
Ian Parker is a Psychoanalyst in Manchester, and Sabah Siddiqui is a Researcher and author of Religion and Psychoanalysis in India (Routledge, 2016). They are both members of the Discourse Unit and the Manchester Psychoanalytic Matrix.
Riassunto
This pioneering volume brings together scholars and clinicians working at the intersection of Islam and psychoanalysis to explore both the connections that link these two traditions, as well as the tensions that exist between them.