- 176 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
When History Returns brings together psychoanalytic theories of learning with the antinomies of social strife. From a psychoanalytic perspective, history returns through transitional scenes of inheriting a past one could not make, experiencing a present affected by what came before, and facing a future one can neither know nor predict. Taking such scenes as the subject of education, Deborah P. Britzman provides new approaches and vocabulary for conceptualizing experience and understanding, as expressed in psychoanalysis, literature, film, clinical case studies, and warm pedagogy. Britzman argues that novel quests for humane responsibility take hold in the fallout of understanding, in the feel of history, in imaginative dialogues and missed encounters, and in searches for friendship, belonging, and affiliation. Each chapter charts these quests in contemporary education, carrying readers into the heart of learning and the emotional situations that urge the transitions of difficult knowledge into care for thinking and the questions that follow.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Prelude: A Special Reading and Writing Attitude
- 1. Reading Freud Today for the Destiny of Education
- 2. Into the Middle of Things
- 3. Turning to the Subject
- 4. On the Pains of Symbolization
- 5. Before and after Misogyny
- 6. The Times of Friendship for Mrs. K. and Richard
- 7. H. G. Adler and Themes of Uncertainty, Transformation, and Binding
- 8. Once Again, but This Time with Feeling
- Notes
- References
- Index
- Back Cover