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Irony Through Psychoanalysis PDF

241 Pages·1992·28.533 MB·English
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G I O R G I O ^ S A C E R D O T I IRONY THROUGH PSYCHOANALYSIS KARNAC BOOKS IRONY THROUGH PSYCHOANALYSIS Giorgio Sacerdoti IRONY T H R O U G H PSYCHOANALYSIS Giorgio Sacerdoti translated by Geraldine Ludbrook forewords by Joseph Sandler and Cesare Musatti Karnac Books London 1992 New York English edition first published in 1992 by H. Karnac (Books) Ltd, 118 Finchley Road, London NW3 5HT Distributed in the United States of America by Brunner/Mazel, Inc. 19 Union Square West New York, NY 10003 Copyright © 1992 by Giorgio Sacerdoti Italian edition, Uironia attraverso la psicoanalisi, © 1987 Raffaello Cortina Editore, Milano, via Rossini 4 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form, by any process or technique, without the prior written permission of the publisher. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data. Sacerdoti, Giorgio Irony Through Psychoanalysis I. Title II. Ludbrook, Geraldine 150.19 ISBN 978 1 85575 010 4 Printed in Great Britain by BPCC Wheatons Ltd, Exeter CONTENTS FOREWORD TO THE ENGLISH EDITION Joseph Sandler ix FOREWORD TO THE ITALIAN EDITION xiii Cesare Musatti xix INTRODUCTION CHAPTER ONE Irony through a psychoanalytic lens 1 Notes on the recent evolution of the concept of irony and on attempts at classification 1 Introduction to the concept of latent irony 5 The psychoanalytic viewpoint 8 Historical outline / 8 Irony and ambiguity / 10 Preconscious and unconscious levels in the emission and reception of ironic messages / 14 Summary of main points and some expectations 21 Vi CONTENTS CHAPTER TWO Ironic aspects in clinical psychoanalysis Some examples and a discussion of latent ironies Interconnections between playful and serious aspects / 36 "Playing" and "being played" / 39 Examples broadened to the problem of pairs of opposites, with particular attention to self-image The active/passive antithesis / 44 The true/false antithesis and the problem of deception in analysis / 50 Pairs of opposites and terminability of the analysis / 60 Unconscious equivalences of the psychopathologic/delinquent antithesis: ironic aspects and prospectives / 69 Summary CHAPTER THREE Ironic aspects in psychoanalytic theorization The work/play pair Irony, insight, and the repressed/repressing pair / 102 Ironic work The analytical relationship as eirdneia / 118 Ironic considerations on the position of metapsychology Summary CONTENTS Vii CHAPTER FOUR Stable irony and genitality: an historical perspective 139 A Jewish theme in Freud's day 139 Freud as ironist / 142 Thejudische Witz / 152 A universal theme today 158 The apparent disappearance of the medium of irony / 164 A clinical detour / 166 Seduction as a form of unstable irony / 167 Irony of seduction in the age of surrogates / 170 Se-duction from what? / 176 Are investment and "playing stakes" irreducible? / 180 "Unicuique suurrT: the renunciation of the "alibi** and the reappearance of the space of irony / 183 Summary of main points 187 BIBLIOGRAPHY 193 INDEX 205 FOREWORD TO THE ENGLISH EDITION Joseph Sandler T he Oxford English Dictionary defines irony as a figure of speech in which the intended meaning is the opposite of that expressed by the words used. In his outstanding book Professor Sacerdoti applies a psychoanalytic point of view to irony and examines the dynamics of this form of expression in its conscious, preconscious, and unconscious aspects. The author poses the question of why irony has been relatively ignored by psychoanalysts, and he responds by showing that Freud had used a limited and rather obsolete definition of irony. He adds, more significantly, that psychoanalysts have paid little attention to the history of ideas, which have also influenced psychoanalysis. He asks why, if irony as a rhetorical device can be considered as one form of expression of thought that can achieve particular concreteness and liveliness, it has acquired a predominantly negative connotation, and why psy­ choanalysts have not made greater use of it. One need only think of the rhetorical value of Antony's saying, Tor Brutus is an honourable man". Over the years, there has been a progres­ sive undervaluation of the communicative potential of irony, ix

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