This book brings together the work of scholars and writer-practitioners
of psychoanalysis to consider the legacy of two of Sigmund Freud's most
important metapsychological papers: 'On Narcissism: An Introduction'
(1914) and 'Mourning and Melancholia' (1917 [1915]). These twin
papers, conceived in the context of unprecedented social and political
turmoil, mark a point in Freud's metapsychological project wherein the
themes of loss and of psychic violence were becoming incontrovertible
facts in the story of subject formation.
Taking as their concern the difficulty of setting apart the 'inner' and
the 'outer' worlds, as well as the difficulty of preserving an image of
the coherently boundaried subject, the psychoanalytic frameworks of
narcissism and melancholia provide the background coordinates for the
volume's contributors to analyse contemporary subjectivities in new
psychosocial contexts. This collection will be of great interest to all
scholars and practitioners of psychoanalysis and the psychotherapies,
social and cultural theory, gender and sexuality studies, politics, and
psychosocial studies.