Psychoanalysis as Radical Hospitality: Six Perspectives on Turning-To Versus Turning-Away

Author(s) : Dana Amir

Part of Psychoanalysis in a New Key series - more in this series

Psychoanalysis as Radical Hospitality: Six Perspectives on Turning-To Versus Turning-Away

Book Details

  • Publisher : Routledge
  • Published : June 2024
  • Cover : Paperback
  • Pages : 152
  • Category :
    Psychoanalysis
  • Catalogue No : 97700
  • ISBN 13 : 9781032715742
  • ISBN 10 : 103271574X
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This book focuses on different forms of turning towards versus turning away from speech across a range of experiences in clinical treatment and general life.

The chapters of this volume deal with the entrapment involved in exile from mother tongue, the parasitic language that uses the other's language as a linguistic prosthesis, the language of blank mourning which separates the mourner from their mourning, the adhesive identification of the voice and the psychotic split between voice and meaning, the mental hypotonia associated with an internalized object that turns away, and the spectrum between revenge and forgiveness. Each chapter sheds light on a different angle of the psyche's ability to spot its own leverage point and use it to transcend the infinite varieties of helpless victimhood: from the position of the victim to the position of the witness, from being the object of the narrative to being its subject, and from the position of righteousness to the willingness to forgive and be forgiven.

This book is a must read for psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, literary scholars, as well as philosophers of language and of the mind.

Reviews and Endorsements

Psychoanalyst and researcher Dana Amir's book Psychoanalysis as Radical Hospitality is another layer in her ground-breaking thinking on the interface between language and the human psyche. The book describes in an extraordinary way deep and complex clinical material and human phenomena, extracting original and crystal-clear insights, which in combination with the wide cultural range on which Amir relies and her poetic articulation - presents a unique, exciting, and cautionary reading of mental-linguistic psychopathology.
Prof. Merav Roth, psychoanalyst and cultural researcher, the Israeli Psychoanalytic Society; University of Haifa; Former chair of the psychoanalytic psychotherapy program, Tel-Aviv university

The present book fits well with the central principle in Amir's thought. In the unique psychoanalytic type that she developed, which can be called "scientific-poetic", she examines what enables psychic movement versus what blocks, fetters, and limits it. Hence the main goal of the psychoanalytic treatment: enable the creation of a space where broad waves exist over large surfaces of sound and rhythm, rich in possibilities and meanings.
Prof. Aner Govrin, Tel-Aviv Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis; Bar-Ilan University

Dana Amir brings together music, poetry, photography, inter alia to psychoanalysis to deepen what I would like to think of as the ‘‘lyrical school of psychoanalysis.
Nilofer Kaul, PhD. Indian Psychoanalytic Society, Delhi, India; The American Journal of Psychoanalysis

Table of Contents


1. The Language of Exile: Reflections on Jean Améry’s Essay “How Much Home Does a Person Need?”
2. Parasitic Language
3. The Bereaved Survivor: Trauma Survivors and Blank Mourning
4. The Experience of Voice in Analytic Listening
5. From 'Turning Away' to 'Turning To': Adoption as Radical Hospitality
6. On Forgiveness

About the Author(s)

Dr Dana Amir is a clinical psychologist, psychoanalyst, poetess and literature researcher. She is the author of four poetry books and two psychoanalytic non-fiction books. She is the winner of the Adler National Poetry Prize (1993), the Bahat Prize for Academic Original Book (2006), the Frances Tustin Memorial Prize (2011), the Prime-Minister Prize for Hebrew Writers (2012), and the IPA Sacerdoti Prize (2013). Cleft Tongue, her second non-fiction book, has recently received the Israel Science Foundation Grant. Dana Amir's papers were published in psychoanalytic journals and presented at national and international conferences. She is a lecturer at Haifa University and practices psychotherapy and psychoanalysis.

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