"It is with great trepidation I endorse this book as I fear I cannot do it justice. It is an awesome book made up of seven seminars given by Jean-Max Gaudilliere and transcribed by his wife, Francoise Davoine, much as Francesca Bion did for her husband, Wilfred Bion. This book is more than a study or exploration of important authors and moments of history, it is itself an act of creation using materials from antiquity to the present, opening profound experience of war, death, madness, and creative use of our many capacities, ways of sensing, feeling, knowing. A book in which primary-secondary processes interact and add life to life. The seminars begin with imaginative amplification of Bion's autobiographical writings and end interweaving Kerouac and Vonnegut. In between are writings using myth, poetry, neurobiology and more as materials to open dimensions of psyche, culture, society. It is a book I will be reading for a long time and I cannot recommend it highly enough as a partner for your - our - journey."Michael Eigen, PhD. Author, The Psychotic Core, The Sensitive, Self, Contact With the Depths, The Challenge of Being Human"The privilege of learning from the brilliant teachings of a practicing psychoanalyst who passed away five years ago, which is now possible thanks to the relentless efforts of his life-and-work partner, Françoise Davoine, is rare, precious, and uniquely instructive. But it is much more. Gaudillière had a keen interest in and a deep understanding of literature, especially novels and plays that staged people wounded so deeply that they had lost their social connectivity. The literary texts, with the help of Gaudillière as their midwife, yield exceptional insights in an aspect of literature rarely if ever analyzed: the way it can first show, then cure, the breaking of the social bond the repairing of which is indispensable for life. Only within sociality is it possible for a political self to emerge, act, and thrive."Mieke Bal, Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis"Jean-Max Gaudilliere’s seminars are breathtaking in their erudition, the enormous sweep of their understanding, and the core, deeply clinical truths they regularly rediscover: that family trauma leads to generational madness; that, in the place of madness, time has stopped and the social order has been perverted; that the silenced "political self" comes to life at the unconscious intersection of the patient’s and therapist’s history. Years ago, toward the end of an anxious bit of travel for my family, Jean-Max said, "It’s OK. I’m here." How grateful we are to Francoise Davoine that we hear that voice still, and that, through his seminars – which, as an occasional guest, seemed to me more intellectually alive than any I had ever experienced – Jean-Max, his patients and all those whose trauma he brings to us continue their teaching." M. Gerard Fromm, Ph.D., Distinguished Faculty, Erikson Institute, Austen Riggs Center ‘Jean-Max Gaudilliére and Francoise Davoine have widened our understanding of "madness." And they have done so in a way that lead us to recognize, "yes, but of course." The words of my deceased colleague Gaetano Benedetti come to mind when thinking of my dear colleague and friend Jean-Max: "It is a comfort, in such troubled times in society, to have the memory of colleagues who have dedicated their professional lives to a discipline like psychotherapy which…effectively represents one of the most noble efforts to relieve the …suffering [of the mad person].This suffering was once-and sometimes still is-considered to lie outside the realm of therapy, whereas it lies in fact at the very heart of it."’Brian Koehler, PhD, MS, New York University