Foreword
Acknowledgements
Introduction
PART I: The Metaphysics of the Death Drive
One: Freud’s Drive Theory
Two: The Development of the Death Drive
Three: Collapse of the Dualistic View
PART II: Give to Each His Own Death
Four: Being towards Death
Five: Towards a Relational Understanding of Death
PART III: Encounters between Freud and Heidegger
Six: Death Structuring Existence
Seven: The Ethics of Death
Eight: Death of Another
Nine: Death and Moods
Ten: Death and the Unconscious
Conclusion
About the Author
Bibliography
Index
Havi Carel is a Lecturer in Philosophy in the Faculty of Arts at the Australian National University. Her research interests include 20th Century German and French philosophy (in particular phenomenology), philosophy of psychology and psychoanalysis (especially Freud) and metaphysics. She is the co-editor ofWhat Philosophy Is (London: Continuum, 2004) and the co-translator of The Order of Evils, by Adi Ophir (Zone Books: New York, 2005).
"This is a very well-conceived and well-executed book that stages a
fascinating confrontation between Heidegger and Freud. Its greatest
merit, in my view, is to show how Freud’s insights into death can
be brought to bear on Heidegger’s existential analytic in a manner
that significantly complicates the relation between authenticity
and inauthenticity and culminates in a relation notion of finitude.
It is a very impressive piece of work." – Simon Critchley,
Professor of Philosophy, New School for Social Research
"Havi Carel’s Life and Death in Freud and Heidegger offers an
impressively lucid study of the relationship between life and
death, showing how the Freudian metaphysics of the death drive can
be usefully supplemented by Heidegger’s phenomenological analysis
of Dasein. Carel doesn’t just present persuasive critiques of
Freudian and Heideggerian approaches to death and finitude; she
also develops an original account, combining Freudian and
Heideggerian insights, of what an ethics of finitude might look
like. Her study thus succeeds admirably in bringing Freudian
psychoanalysis and Heideggerian phenomenology into a welcome
critical dialogue." – Robert Sinnerbrink, Macquarie University,
Sydney
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