Chapter 1 The Primal Leap*Origins = Ur Sprung in German, literally “primal leap.” This paper was originally delivered in May, 1995 at a conference commemorating the hundredth anniversary of the Studies, “The Psychoanalytic Century,” at NYU. Thanks to M. Dimen and A. Harris. of Psychoanalysis, From Body to Speech; Chapter 2 “Constructions of Uncertain Content”; Chapter 3 The Shadow of the Other Subject;
Jessica Benjamin is a psychoanalyst in New York City, where she is on the faculty of the New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. She is the author of Bonds of Love (1988) and LikeObjects, Love Objects (1995).
"Jessica Benjamin's latest effort to bring critical theory and
psychoanalysis into a dynamic conversation results in many splendid
insights. She defends her provocative claim that psychoanalysis is
an extension of the Enlightenment, clarifies her own relational
contribution to object-relations theory, and insists that harboring
alterity within the self remains the ideal for psychic life. Along
the way, she emphasizes the importance of undoing repudiations, of
rewriting the oedipal and pre-oedipal in relation to gender
polarity, and reminds us of the oscilliation of gender categories.
In calling for a reintegration of the preoedipal into the
postoedipal, she makes the matter of intersubjective recognition at
once complex and urgent." -- Judith Butler, University of
California, Berkeley
"Shadow of the Other extends Benjamin's groundbreaking and
influential studies of gender, intersubjectivity, love and
aggression. Her original elaboration of intersubjectivity serves to
intertwine feminism and relational psychoanalysis into a tightly
woven and richly textured intellectual tapestry. What really sets
Benjamin's work apart is her brilliant utilization of a systematic
dialectical approach to her subject, always maintaining the
delicate balance between opposing tensions: masculinity and
femininity, subjectivity and objectivity, passivity and activity,
love and aggression, fantasy and reality, modernism and
postmodernism, the intrapsychic and the intersubjective. Benjamin's
capacity to creatively play with intellectual ideas is unsurpassed
as she continually spins concepts around, moving in new,
unexpected, and surprisingly useful directions." -- Lewis Aron,
Ph.D., ABPP New York University Postdoctoral Program
"The Shadow of the Other... is an impressive effort at building and
integrating theory in the domain of feminism, gender, object
relations theory, and intersubjectivity." -- Journal of the
AmericanPsychoanalytic Association
"...tightly written and carefully argued." -- Journal ofFeminist
Family Therapy
"A timely volume for gender studies programs, and for graduate
programs with psychoanalytic components." -- Choice
"[Benjamin] champions a sophisticated view of the way we
internalize the other, while seeking to avoid the danger of
allowing talk about mutual recognition and caring to become a way
to trap women back into their traditional role as the sole caring
ones. This is an important book." -- Tikkun
"In this tightly written and carefilly argued essay, she addresses
the problem of the Other's consciousness." -- Journal of Feminist
Family Therapy
"Shadow of the Other has much to offer the sophisticated reader who
is willing to work a little to appreciate the complex ideas
contained within it. Its intellectual and esoteric qualities make
it well suited to academe." -- Psychoanalytic Books
"While many of Benjamin's points in this book are not new within
psychology, many of her specific formulations of them are, as well
as her drawing together of these points with support from
apparently divergent schools of thought." -- Transformations
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