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Full Description
This volume introduces readers to the work of Jungian psychoanalyst Ladson Hinton, and his development of thought on the fields of psychoanalysis and existential philosophy throughout his career.
Working as an analyst for nearly fifty years, strongly emphasizing humility with a central focus on shame and temporality, this new volume edited by friend and colleague Hessel Willemsen encompasses reflections and writings dating from his emergence as a young analyst in 1975 through to present day. Mindful of the deep and considerable changes in contemporary society, his work provides a helpful lens for understanding how aspects of our politics, technologies, and social media underlie our contemporary loss of freedom of thought and experience, amidst our time of ominous transitions. Chapters cover topics such as death, foolishness and shame, reconnecting with our animal soul, temporality, Jung's theoretical position on existential philosophy, among many others.
Psychoanalysts, psychotherapists, philosophers, anthropologists and academics and students engaged in cultural studies and critical theory will gain valuable insights from this book's rich and engaging variety of perspectives.
Contents
Introduction 1. Love, Death, and the Infernal Machine 2. An Interview with Ladson Hinton Conducted by Hessel Willemsen on 5th April 2021 3. Fools, Foolishness and Feeling Foolish 4. A Return to the Animal Soul 5. The Hunt for the Wild Unicorn: Containment, Sacrifice, and Evolution 6. Black Holes, Uncanny Spaces and Radical Shifts in Awareness 7. The Enigmatic Signifier and the Decentred Subject 8. Unus Mundus—transcendent Truth or Comforting Fiction? Overwhelm and the Search for Meaning in a Fragmented World 9. Temporality and the Torments of Time 10. Is Jung Existential or Not? Reflections on Temporality and Everydayness 11. Trauma, Shame and Enigma: Reflections on Joseph Conrad's Lord Jim 12. Shame and Temporality in the Streets: Consumerism, Technology, Truth and Raw Life 13. Jung, Time, and Ethics 14. The Unsilencing of Oedipus: Time, Monstrousness, Truth, and Shame 15. Man and Machine: Dilemmas of the Human



