An Independent Book of the Month
Penises, and the things people do with them, have been subjects of
controversy for a long time. This book examines how one thing that some
people do to penises-remove the foreskin-has become a site upon which
vital questions of gender, race, religion, sexuality, and psychic life
are negotiated. While most contemporary work on the subject is concerned
with whether circumcision is right or wrong, safe or harmful,
Circumcision on the Couch takes as its starting point that the
significance of male circumcision exceeds anatomical and juridical
considerations.
Deploying a feminist Lacanian framework, while drawing from a wide range
of archival sources and critical thought, Jordan Osserman asks: How can
psychoanalysis help us shed light on the ideologies, discourses, and
fantasies surrounding circumcision and the impassioned stances for and
against it? And how might the history of circumcision, in turn, allow us
to re-assess and clarify how we understand the split (or "snipped")
subject of psychoanalysis?