The Gendered Unconscious: Feminist interventions in
psychoanalysis have often attempted either to subvert or re-frame the masculinist
and phallocentric biases of Freud's psychoanalysis. This book investigates the nature
of these interventions by comparing the status and treatment of women in two
different psychoanalytic models: the Kleinian and the feminist models. It argues that,
in fact, these interventions have historically tended to reinforce such biases by
collapsing the distinction between the gendered minds of individuals and theories of
gender. This investigation is framed by two steps. First, in assessing the position of
women and the feminine in psychoanalysis, The Gendered Unconscious explores
not only the ways they are represented in theory, but also how these
representations function in practice. Secondly, this book uses a framework of a
comparative dialogue to highlight the assumptions and values that underpin the
theory and clinical practice in the two psychoanalytic models. This comparative
critique concludes with the counter-intuitive claim that contemporary Kleinian
theory may, in practice, hold more radical possibilities for the interests of women
than the practices derived from
contemporary psychoanalytic gender theory.
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