This book illustrates that the Castration Complexand the question of the distinction between the sexes are enmeshed in psychoanalytic theories. The subjective negotiation of this distinction impacts the future sexual positions taken up (or not) by the subject, indicating that human sexuality is by no means a given or a natural occurrence in psychoanalysis.
Engagement with the psychoanalytic theory of castration provides the reader with a different perspective on the current societys insistence on gradually dissolving the differences between the sexes. For Freud, castration complex is the key to understanding the psychical consequences of the anatomical distinction between the sexes. For Lacan, castration introduces the subject to his/her very existence as a sexed being. Mou Sultana illustrates how these two revolutionary theorists came to such conclusions by close reading of the core texts, interpreting them and highlighting their relevance both within and outside the clinic of modern times.
Foreword
Chapter 1 Castration complex for Freud between 1907-1909
Chapter 2 Castration complex for Freud in 1925
Chapter 3 Freuds theories of Castration in Female Sexuality(1931b)
Chapter 4 Brief introduction to bisexual disposition and its place within Freuds psychoanalytic theories
Chapter 5 New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis - Lecture XXXIII Femininity (1933a)
Chapter 6 Castration for Lacan Seminar IV (1956-57)
Chapter 7 The fate of infantile sexual research questions
It is apt that In this era of gender fluidity, Mou Sultana has written such an accessible and theoretically illuminating psychoanalytic work on the nature of psychosexual development. Her argument that the acquisition of sexuality is a phenomenon of the subject taking up a position (or not), as opposed tl“–