'Psychoanalytic Mythologies' presents a collection of essays on the
theme of what it is to be a human subject in a culture permeated by
psychoanalytic imagery. The author disturbs the strongly-held belief of
those in thrall to psychoanalysis that it is universally true, and this
thesis forms the recurrent motif that binds these essays together.
Instead he argues that psychoanalysis functions as something that is
only ever locally true. These arguments are elaborated upon in a range
of contexts, from night clubs, garages and trains to theme parks, magic
circles and yoga, and the different strands are distilled into a
cohesive thesis in the definitive final essay 'Psychoanalytic Myth
Today'. The essays presented here were initially published in scattered
newsletters and journals, and were written intermittently in a period
stretching back over ten years. Ian Parker has written widely in this
area, and these lively and innovative essays taken together form a
searing manifesto against the accepted dogmas of psychoanalysis.