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Archive Fevers

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Archive Fevers offers a playful queer/feminist interpretation of Jacques Derrida’s Archive Fever. Through its creative critical form, the book demonstrates the unconscious life of research while interrogating the often misunderstood, overlooked, or misrepresented landscape of individual gender-queer experiences of therapy. Utilizing the framework of experimental narrative fiction, Blake elucidates Derrida’s concept of archive fever, Freud’s seminal concept of the death drive, and Avital Ronell’s concept of haunted writing. The relationship between anthropology, psychoanalysis, and surrealism during the early 20th century is examined throughout. Surrealism, though shunned by anthropology and psychotherapy, asserts an urgent contemporary usefulness. The role of technology in psychotherapy comes under necessary scrutiny, with the ever-changing backdrop of a global pandemic adding yet another layer of relevance to current psychotherapy practice. The resulting narrative brings to the fore the bizarre, messy, disturbing, and sometimes gruesome aspects of archival and ethnographic research that are usually left out of formal accounts.

Nákup knihy

Archive Fevers, Tara Blake

Jazyk
Rok vydání
2022
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Titul
Archive Fevers
Jazyk
anglicky
Autoři
Tara Blake
Rok vydání
2022
Vazba
měkká
ISBN10
1911343777
ISBN13
9781911343776
Série
Hodnocení
4 z 5
Anotace
Archive Fevers offers a playful queer/feminist interpretation of Jacques Derrida’s Archive Fever. Through its creative critical form, the book demonstrates the unconscious life of research while interrogating the often misunderstood, overlooked, or misrepresented landscape of individual gender-queer experiences of therapy. Utilizing the framework of experimental narrative fiction, Blake elucidates Derrida’s concept of archive fever, Freud’s seminal concept of the death drive, and Avital Ronell’s concept of haunted writing. The relationship between anthropology, psychoanalysis, and surrealism during the early 20th century is examined throughout. Surrealism, though shunned by anthropology and psychotherapy, asserts an urgent contemporary usefulness. The role of technology in psychotherapy comes under necessary scrutiny, with the ever-changing backdrop of a global pandemic adding yet another layer of relevance to current psychotherapy practice. The resulting narrative brings to the fore the bizarre, messy, disturbing, and sometimes gruesome aspects of archival and ethnographic research that are usually left out of formal accounts.