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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Shaul Bar-HaimPublisher: University of Pennsylvania Press Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN: 9780812253153ISBN 10: 0812253159 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 06 August 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThe Maternalists provides at once a highly original interpretation of key figures in post-Freudian psychoanalysis and a novel take on the ideas that animated the expansion and reformation of the British welfare state. In focusing on the efforts to 'maternalize' the state-indeed to 'maternalize' society as a whole-Shaul Bar-Haim fundamentally rewrites the story we thought we knew. But the book achieves yet more, as it returns to the once tightly intertwined evolutions of psychoanalysis and anthropology, and recovers indispensable, heretofore underappreciated anti-colonial strands within the psychoanalytic tradition. -Dagmar Herzog, author of Unlearning Eugenics This is a fascinating and important book. Shaul Bar-Haim plumbs a variety of continental and British psychoanalytic thinkers, from Freud and Ferenczi to Winnicott and Balint, to illuminate the ways in which they helped shape the post-war welfare state with its decidedly maternal cast. Where varying interpretations of feminism play into this, where neo-liberalism abandoned the responsible state, is also his theme. The Maternalists is a riveting contribution both to our understanding of the social influence of psychoanalytic thought and the meanings of the welfare state. -Lisa Appignanesi, author of Mad, Bad, and Sad The Maternalists provides at once a highly original interpretation of key figures in post-Freudian psychoanalysis and a novel take on the ideas that animated the expansion and reformation of the British welfare state. In focusing on the efforts to 'maternalize' the state--indeed to 'maternalize' society as a whole--Shaul Bar-Haim fundamentally rewrites the story we thought we knew. But the book achieves yet more, as it returns to the once tightly intertwined evolutions of psychoanalysis and anthropology, and recovers indispensable, heretofore underappreciated anti-colonial strands within the psychoanalytic tradition.--Dagmar Herzog, author of Unlearning Eugenics This is a fascinating and important book. Shaul Bar-Haim plumbs a variety of continental and British psychoanalytic thinkers, from Freud and Ferenczi to Winnicott and Balint, to illuminate the ways in which they helped shape the post-war welfare state with its decidedly maternal cast. Where varying interpretations of feminism play into this, where neo-liberalism abandoned the responsible state, is also his theme. The Maternalists is a riveting contribution both to our understanding of the social influence of psychoanalytic thought and the meanings of the welfare state.--Lisa Appignanesi, author of Mad, Bad, and Sad Bar-Haim sets out to demonstrate how much of what we think of as democracy was forged in conjunction with a cultural shift to valuing mothers. The book brings together several strands of existing historiography, such as the development of a relations-based psychoanalysis from Freud's drive-based model, the emergence of the mother figure within this new psychoanalysis, and the synergy between the new psychoanalysis and the welfare state...[T]he book's contribution is impressive. Deploying a multiplicity of primary and secondary sources, some of them archival and unpublished, Bar-Haim presents a compelling account of a historical transformation in the consequences of which we all live. While surveying sources from various disciplines, he avoids both jargon and oversimplification: the essay remains nuanced and accessible throughout. And in a scholarly world that rewards a specialization-to-naught strategy, Bar-Haim's opting for a broad lens is courageous.-- The History of the Behavioral Sciences The Maternalists provides at once a highly original interpretation of key figures in post-Freudian psychoanalysis and a novel take on the ideas that animated the expansion and reformation of the British welfare state. In focusing on the efforts to 'maternalize' the state--indeed to 'maternalize' society as a whole--Shaul Bar-Haim fundamentally rewrites the story we thought we knew. But the book achieves yet more, as it returns to the once tightly intertwined evolutions of psychoanalysis and anthropology, and recovers indispensable, heretofore underappreciated anticolonial strands within the psychoanalytic tradition.-- Dagmar Herzog, author of Unlearning Eugenics This is a fascinating and important book. Shaul Bar-Haim plumbs a variety of continental and British psychoanalytic thinkers, from Freud and Ferenczi to Winnicott and Balint, to illuminate the ways in which they helped shape the postwar welfare state with its decidedly maternal cast. The Maternalists is a riveting contribution both to our understanding of the social influence of psychoanalytic thought and the meanings of the welfare state.-- Lisa Appignanesi, author of Mad, Bad, and Sad [The] ‘maternal turn’ in interwar psychoanalytic discourse in Britain, which was at the same time a turn from Freud to Klein, and its impact on postwar welfare policy, is the subject of Shaul Bar-Haim’s book. He argues that progressive ‘maternalistic’ thinkers from the interwar period involved in education, anthropology and the ‘psy’ professions connected new psychoanalytic ideas of motherhood to an ideal of the state as a maternal entity. The ‘maternal ethics’ of the period were a response to the horrors of the First World War and the emergence of fascism on the continent. In this figuration, motherhood is less a lived experience than a site of collective imaginings, a meeting point between private and public spaces. As Bar-Haim argues, women and mothers were the main intermediaries between the family and the state in its newly interventionist mode, through their encounters with GPs, social workers, psychotherapists and teachers. * London Review of Books * Bar‐Haim sets out to demonstrate how much of what we think of as democracy was forged in conjunction with a cultural shift to valuing mothers. The book brings together several strands of existing historiography, such as the development of a relations‐based psychoanalysis from Freud's drive‐based model, the emergence of the mother figure within this new psychoanalysis, and the synergy between the new psychoanalysis and the welfare state…[T]he book's contribution is impressive. Deploying a multiplicity of primary and secondary sources, some of them archival and unpublished, Bar‐Haim presents a compelling account of a historical transformation in the consequences of which we all live. While surveying sources from various disciplines, he avoids both jargon and oversimplification: the essay remains nuanced and accessible throughout. And in a scholarly world that rewards a specialization‐to‐naught strategy, Bar‐Haim's opting for a broad lens is courageous. * The History of the Behavioral Sciences * The Maternalists provides at once a highly original interpretation of key figures in post-Freudian psychoanalysis and a novel take on the ideas that animated the expansion and reformation of the British welfare state. In focusing on the efforts to ‘maternalize’ the state—indeed to ‘maternalize’ society as a whole—Shaul Bar-Haim fundamentally rewrites the story we thought we knew. But the book achieves yet more, as it returns to the once tightly intertwined evolutions of psychoanalysis and anthropology, and recovers indispensable, heretofore underappreciated anticolonial strands within the psychoanalytic tradition. * Dagmar Herzog, author of <i>Unlearning Eugenics</i> * This is a fascinating and important book. Shaul Bar-Haim plumbs a variety of continental and British psychoanalytic thinkers, from Freud and Ferenczi to Winnicott and Balint, to illuminate the ways in which they helped shape the postwar welfare state with its decidedly maternal cast. The Maternalists is a riveting contribution both to our understanding of the social influence of psychoanalytic thought and the meanings of the welfare state. * Lisa Appignanesi, author of <i>Mad, Bad, and Sad</i> * Author InformationShaul Bar-Haim is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at the University of Essex. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |