These days, who still has a soul? asks Julia Kristeva in her
psychoanalytic exploration, New Maladies of the Soul. Hailed by Peter
Brooks in the New York Times as "a critic of great psychoanalytic
insight," Kristeva reveals to readers a new kind of patient, symptomatic
of an age of political upheaval, mass-mediated culture, and the dramatic
overhaul of familial and sexual mores. The book poses a troubling
question about the human subject in the West today: Is the psychic space
that we have traditionally known disappearing?