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  1.  21
    Introduction: Intersubjectivity, Desire, and Mimetic Theory:René Girard and Psychoanalysis.Pierpaolo Antonello & Alessandra Diazzi - 2019 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 26 (1):1-7.
    The aim of this special collection of essays, titled Intersubjectivity, Desire, and Mimetic Theory: René Girard and Psychoanalysis, is to reappraise the relationship between René Girard's thought and the psychoanalytic tradition. The tripartite structure of the title clearly echoes the English title of Girard's first book, Deceit, Desire and the Novel, with which he introduced the psychological dynamics of mimetic desire as represented in modern European novels.1 Through the reference to the intentionally broad notions of "intersubjectivity," "desire," and "mimetic theory," (...)
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    Notes on Elvio Fachinelli and René Girard: The Psychoanalysis of Dissent Meets Mimetic Theory.Alessandra Diazzi - 2019 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 26 (1):109-122.
    In a short article on the practice of psychoanalysis in Italy, Sergio Benvenuto observes that the country has never been considered a central hub for the development and diffusion of the discipline. As a result, he notes, "very few are interested in Italian psychoanalysis: up until now, Italy has not produced as many famous 'masters' in this field as has Austria, Germany, Switzerland, France, Great Britain, the US, and other countries."1Although Benvenuto is right in claiming that the psychoanalytic panorama in (...)
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    Psychoanalysis, ideology and commitment in Italy 1945-1975: Edoardo Sanguineti, Ottiero Ottieri, Andrea Zanzotto.Alessandra Diazzi - 2022 - Cambridge: Legenda.
    Over the post-war decades, Italy's 'extroverted' cultural identity was mostly oriented towards social and political questions: the inward turn of psychoanalysis was regarded with suspicion, as a fin-de-siècle cure for middle-class neuroses. The consulting room was, for militant intellectuals, antithetic to class-consciousness and the collective struggle. But despite this resistance from leftist, or Communist, intellectual discourse, psychoanalysis became steadily more influential. In the period up to the late 1970s, the triad of politics-ideology-commitment acted as a threefold track through which psychoanalysis (...)
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