While psychoanalysis has traditionally been at odds with transgender issues, a growing body of revisionist psychoanalytic theory and clinical practice has begun to tease out the trans-affirming potential of the field. This issue features essays that highlight this potential by simultaneously critiquing and working within the boundaries of psychoanalytic concepts and theories guiding clinical work. Featuring a range of clinicians and scholars, this issue centers on questions pertaining to trans* experience, desire, difference, otherness, identification, loss, mourning, and embodiment. The contributors explore these questions through topics like bathroom bans, ethics, popular culture, and the Freudian couch. By setting up this dialogue between psychosocial studies and trans* cultural studies, this revisionist work may radically transform psychoanalytic theory and practice.
Contributors. Sheila L. Cavanagh, Chris Coffman, Elena Dalla Torre, Kate Foord, Patricia Gherovici, Oren Gozlan, Griffin Hansbury, Jordon Osserman, Amy Ray Stewart, Simon van der Weele
About the AuthorSheila L. Cavanagh is Associate Professor of Sociology at York University and coeditor of
Somatechnics journal. She is author of
Queering Bathrooms: Gender, Sexuality, and the Hygienic Imagination and
Sexing the Teacher: School Sex Scandals and Queer Pedagogies and coeditor of
Skin, Culture, and Psychoanalysis.
Book InformationISBN 9780822370956
Author Sheila L. CavanaghFormat Paperback
Page Count 352
Imprint Duke University PressPublisher Duke University Press