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The Self Between: From Freud to the New Social Psychology of France

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After the disappointing events of the 1960s, including the loss of Algeria, the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, and the American war in the former French colony of Indo-China, people in France began to look seriously to Freudianism in the transformed version of Jacques Lacan, for a new way of understanding human relations and the relations between human beings and society. The movement in France is not specifically psychoanalytic but developed against such a background. Psychoanalytic thought acquired the kind of centrality in French intellectual life once associated with existentialism and Marxism and later with structuralism--a centrality it probably never possessed in the United States, even at the peak of its popularity. The movement was a reassessment and rethinking of Freud’s thought and influence, and it iwa a movement that was almost unknown to the American public.

272 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1993

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About the author

Eugene Webb

19 books7 followers
Professor Emeritus Eugene Webb was Professor of Comparative Religion and Comparative Literature and Associate Director of the Jackson School of International Studies at The University of Washington.

Professor Webb is the author of seven books, including two on the novels and plays of Samuel Beckett, as well as The Dark Dove: The Sacred and Secular in Modern Literature (1975), Eric Voegelin: Philosopher of History (1981), Philosophers of Consciousness (1988), and The Self Between: From Freud to the New Social Psychology of France (1993), World View and Mind: Religious Thought and Psychological Development (2009), and In Search of the Triune God: The Christian Paths of East and West (2014).

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