Description
Literary Nonfiction. Religion and Spirituality. Psychology. A KAFKAESQUE MEMOIR is that rarity in the psychological literature: a patient's account of the complete arc of his own psychoanalysis from first session to last. It is the memoir of a literature professor who walks into a psychotherapist's office one day seeking a quick hypnotherapy fix for a driving phobia and ends up staying for a nine-year Jungian analysis that fundamentally transforms him. Looking back on his recently completed analysis, the professor recreates his near-decade-long conversation with his analyst, a dialogue that gradually unearths the roots of a deep sense of guilt he feels over an "abandoned child." This personal psychological drama unfolds in the context of certain cultural themes that have woven themselves deeply into the professor's nexus of values over a lifetime and profoundly shaped his worldview. These include: the strange parables of Franz Kafka, Zen Buddhism in America, French deconstruction, the roots of psychoanalysis in German culture and the nature and philosophical questioning of analysis itself. The enigmatic writings of Kafka, in particular, become a kind of fictive code used by the professor to probe his deepest conflicts. Following the opening "Introductions," which tells of their mutually wary first meeting, each chapter begins with the professor's report to the analyst of a key dream, which then becomes the point of departure for that session's (often feisty) dialogue.
As the story of a long-term analysis that moves gradually through the stages of the professor's angry defensive posturing and religio-philosophical jousting to a deep mutual sympathy between patient and doctor, the book is rich in intellectual and emotional substance; but, in the professor's recalling of key life events, it offers as well a full-bodied social canvas of its time. Personal struggle, the dance of analysis and the contemporary culture wars intersect in this absorbing tale of a man's late-life quest to heal a deeply divided self.
Author Bio
As a career-long professor of German at Syracuse University, Dennis McCort specialized in German Romanticism, 19th-century German fiction, religion and/in literature and Franz Kafka. Much of his research focuses on common ground among these: e.g., his book, Going beyond the Pairs, a study of Romanticism, Zen Buddhism and deconstruction, is not only a study of East- West comparative literature and religion but considers the work of Franz Kafka as well. His articles have included such topics as the influence of Rilke and Zen on J. D. Salinger, the Zen style and spirit of Kafka's short fiction and the representation of madness in the fiction of E.T.A. Hoffmann. In 2017 he published A KAFKAESQUE MEMOIR with PalmArtPress, a personal narrative tracing the shaping influence of the mind and personality of Franz Kafka on a nine-year-long Jungian analysis he had undergone.
Author City: SYRACUSE, NY USA