Unknowing as Truth
- Nyhet
Epistemic Inversions and the Recursive Psyche
Inbunden, Engelska, 2026
2 909 kr
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2026-05-27
- Mått156 x 234 x undefined mm
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- SeriePsychoanalysis in a New Key Book Series
- Antal sidor330
- FörlagTaylor & Francis Ltd
- ISBN9781041255208
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Todd Anderson, PhD, PsyD, is a New York–based psychoanalyst. His work explores how dissociation, desire, and symbolic remainder shape psychic survival, drawing together object relations, relational psychoanalysis, and contemporary philosophy in a vivid, practice-centered prose.
- Part I: The Inverted Fame 1. Unknowing at the Threshold—From Interpretation to Epistemic Refusal 2. Oedipus as Myth of Knowing—Refusing the Law of Linearity 3. Projection as Knowledge Transmission—Recursive Unknowing and the Symbolic Field Part II: The Recursive Field 4. Recursive Interiors—Self-Structure, Temporality, and the Symbolic Logic of Linking 5. Introjection as Hospitality—Containment, Curvature, and the Limits of Psychic Welcome 6. Fantasy as Recursive Field—Atmosphere, Emergence, and the Ethics of Not-Knowing 7. Destruction as Inversion—Aggression, Ruin, and the Ethics of Refusal 8. Civilization as Remainder—Opacity, the Uncanny, and the Failure to Sublimate Part III: The Ethics of Unknowing 9. Antigone’s Refusal—Witnessing, Opacity, and the Ethics of Unlawful Knowing 10. The Uncanny as Curved Structure—Estrangement, Surprise, and Recursive Affect 11.The Ethics of Failure—Witnessing, Not-Knowing, and Containment 12. The Other Side of Knowing—Secrecy, Surprise, and the Symbolic 13. Coda—Recursive Ethics and the Future of Unknowing Afterthinking at the Edge: Recursive Hospitality, Tögal, and the Weather of Analytic Life
'Across my career, I have enjoyed the privilege of reading literally thousands of books on psychoanalysis, but I cannot ever recall having encountered such a unique and stimulating publication as Dr. Todd Anderson’s new text on Unknowing as Truth: Epistemic Inversions and the Recursive Psyche. This deeply original and profoundly scholarly tome provides us all with tremendous insights into the true complexity of listening to, speaking with, and understanding the rich minds of our patients. Anderson certainly thinks and writes with immense care and with deep detail about the very musicality of the psychoanalytical process. I strongly suspect that Sigmund Freud would be very proud of such a memorable book.'Prof. Brett Kahr, senior fellow, Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology; honorary director of research, Freud Museum London; author of Hidden Histories of British Psychoanalysis'In this intelligent and erudite book, Todd Anderson proposes a novel approach to psychoanalytic treatment, one that privileges a transferential relationship grounded in empathy, affect, and the psychic margins—often difficult to grasp—rather than symbolic interpretation centered on the analysis of discourse. To accomplish this reconfiguration, he draws on post-Freudians such as Wilfred R. Bion and Hans Loewald, thereby reviving an interwar debate between Freud and Ferenczi, the former often considered too paternal, the latter too feminine. A major achievement.'Élisabeth Roudinesco, PhD, historian and psychoanalyst; author of Freud: In His Time and Ours'Dans ce livre intelligent et érudit, Todd Anderson propose une nouvelle approche de la cure psychanalytique, privilégiant une relation transférentielle fondée sur l’empathie, l’affect et les marges psychiques, souvent impossibles à saisir, plutôt que sur l’interprétation symbolique mettant en jeu l’analyse des discours. Pour effectuer cette refonte, il s’appuie sur les post-freudiens (Wilfred R. Bion et Hans Loewald) et renoue ainsi avec un débat de l’entre-deux-guerres qui avait opposé Freud et Ferenczi, l’un jugé trop paternaliste et l’autre trop féminin. Une réussite.'Élisabeth Roudinesco (original French text)'What if psychoanalysis were above all the practice of docta ignorantia? Learned ignorance as a key clinical tool: here is Todd Anderson’s thesis when he proposes an “ethics of unknowing” to rethink creatively psychoanalytic concepts like projection, aggression, and destruction, and stage exciting dialogues between thinkers like Bion and Levinas, Bollas and Derrida, Lacan and Loewald, Ferenczi and Laplanche. His numerous clinical vignettes, all imbued with a refreshingly Surrealist atmosphere, make the theoretical stakes very clear.' Jean-Michel Rabaté, PhD, University of Pennsylvania and American Academy of Arts and Sciences; author of Lacan and Psychoanalytic Obsolescence 'Unknowing as Truth: Epistemic Inversions and the Recursive Psyche is an intellectually bold book that offers a provocative reading of the clinical practice of psychoanalysis. Eschewing the theoretical model of a system that would render all inconsistencies and difficulties transparent in light of a lucid totality, Todd Anderson opts for a mode of thinking that celebrates the opacity of the remainder—the residue of tensions, paradoxes, and asymmetries that cannot be assimilated into a coherent sense of the whole. Appreciating the epistemic centrality of unknowing to the process of human cognition sensitizes us to the truism that the fragment must always be subject to further fragmentation. Drawing upon the recursive form of the fugue, attested especially in the musical compositions of Bach, Anderson proffers an alternative to the conventional linear understanding of temporality that shapes the contours of consciousness. Just as the fugue doubles back on itself to reveal new dimensions, so the cadence of time—mirrored in the structure of the psyche—is informed by the paradoxical realization that each moment is the same because different and different because the same. The future, accordingly, is such that we are continually returning in the present to a past where we have never been. I am confident that this monograph will contribute significantly to the shifting yet continuous pursuit of the ethics of unknowing that is at the heart of analytic truth, and to the aesthetic temperament necessary to engage the complex structures of human subjectivity.'Elliot R. Wolfson, PhD, distinguished professor emeritus of religious studies, University of California, Santa Barbara; author of Heidegger and Kabbalah and A Dream Interpreted Within a Dream'What Todd Anderson accomplishes in Unknowing as Truth is utterly revelatory. By reframing psychoanalysis as recursive topology and epistemic inversion, he draws the reader into a genuinely psychoanalytic odyssey: what is deeply familiar is rendered strange, what is strange or faintly perceived rendered articulate, even obvious, and what emerges is nothing less than uncanny. The content, the book’s recursive structure, and the writing itself work synergistically to create these effects. Anderson reminds us that psychoanalysis’s true potential lies in the creative, unresolved potential of what surprises, exceeds epistemic capture, and risks new symbolic form. This is a reawakened psychoanalysis—not only relevant, but necessary for a new era of human consciousness.'Jill Gentile, PhD, NYU Postdoctoral Program; author of Feminine Law: Freud, Free Speech, and the Voice of Desire 'This book is, in its own words, “an invitation to risk surprise at the edge of the sayable.” Its premise is that psychoanalytic ideas are recursive, always folding back on themselves and opening out again in new ways. This pushes creatively at the boundaries of theory, and brings a specific, very valuable kind of openness (“hospitality” is Todd Anderson’s apt word) into the clinical situation. There is a remarkable range of reference, including music, art, literature, and even Tibetan mysticism. Without question, a book that will enrich its readers.'Michael Parsons, distinguished fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society; author of The Dove that Returns, The Dove that Vanishes'With this powerful text, Todd Anderson draws us into the complex textures and challenges of the opaque and fluid emotional dimensions of analytic interaction. He uses contributions from major theorists to weave a convincing sense of the significance of recursiveness as it manifests to open up possibilities, or not, for any analytic encounter. With his emphasis on recursiveness, Anderson helps the analyst tolerate limits that haunt the ideals of any attempt to understand and represent self experience, analytically or otherwise.'Steven H. Knoblauch, PhD, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis; Institute for the Psychoanalytic Study of Subjectivity'In this scholarly, sophisticated volume, Todd Anderson pushes beyond the expected and challenges us to interrogate the clinical and theoretical value of inversion. Turning our ordinary assumptions about the value of paradox, Anderson invites us to consider how "unknowing" deepens our clinical work and the way we conceptualize it.'Joyce Slochower, PhD, ABPP, NYU Postdoctoral Program; author of Psychoanalysis and the Unspoken'Psychoanalysis is often said to lack innovation. Be aware, dear reader: with this book you’ll encounter highly intelligent clinical wisdom and a fresh way of theorizing what can be “seen” and “heard”—and made available to us and our patients. Among its most important contributions is “recursion,” including a temporal dimension that Anderson calls “recursive scaffolding.” What better way to restore the analytic building, a hundred years on, than a scaffold that holds while we look deeper? Throughout, Anderson honors contemporary clinical authors and brings their insights to new heights so we may see further.'Prof. Dr. Dr. Michael B. Buchholz, International Psychoanalytic University (IPU) Berlin'Todd Anderson’s proposal to replace paradox with epistemic inversion is as innovative as it is timely. By focusing on affect, atmosphere, and surprise, he shows that psychoanalysis remains a vital method for understanding our current moment and orienting ourselves within it. To celebrate open-endedness rather than fixed certainty is both an epistemological and an ethical opportunity.'Prof. Dr. Dr. Elisabeth Bronfen, University of Zürich; & global distinguished professor, New York University'Unknowing as Truth is a groundbreaking, highly sophisticated, and wholly original work that will inspire and enrich psychoanalytic theory and practice for a long time to come. It sets new standards for recognizing what eludes knowledge and integration—and opens a space in which surprise, atmosphere, and remainder can be productively lived and thought.'Prof. Dr. Hans-Jürgen Wirth, professor of psychoanalytic social psychology, University of Frankfurt am Main; psychoanalyst and publisher, Psychosozial-Verlag, Gießen'Anderson knows that even the most abstract psychoanalytic and philosophical chains of concepts matter for their music. He invites us to read this text of his as a series of toccatas and fugues in the manner of Baroque music. In the shimmering of meanings, the reader will savor the dynamic geometry of ideas.'Sergio Benvenuto, Institute for Advanced Studies in Psychoanalysis (ISAP), Rome; editor, European Journal of Psychoanalysis