Review of Tales of the Unconscious by Christopher Gibson reviewed by Maurice Whelan

Click Here to Read: Review of Tales of the Unconscious by Christopher Gibson reviewed by Maurice Whelan

Click Below to Purchase: Tales of the Unconscious by Christopher Gibson
https://ipbooks.net/product/tales-from-the-unconscious-by-christopher-gibson/

About Tales of the Unconscious:
Tales from the Unconscious is a collection of stories from the anarchic world of the unconscious. It is for anyone interested in the inner life, as described by psychoanalysis, especially if you are approaching the ideas for the first time. The stories attempt to illustrate the vicissitudes of our inner lives and the unconscious by which we live..There are three short books in one:

Expectations, short stories about love—unrequited, failed, impossible, and cruel. In Provocations, the theme is the provocative arousal of emotions in another person. And Audacities is a collection about the audacity of suicide that affects many lives. I try to show how cruelty, unkindness, and envy creep into all aspects of life. After a suicide, nothing is resolved.

Christopher Gibson is a psychoanalyst, a child analyst, a training analyst of the Swedish Psychoanalytical Association, and a member of the International Psychoanalytical Association. He practices and teaches in Gothenburg, Sweden.

Review of The Distance from Home by Daniel Jacobs   and Memory’s Eyes by Cordelia Schmidt-Hellerau by Barbara Stimmel in The Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 

Click Here to Read: A Review of The Distance from Home by Daniel Jacobs  by Barbara Stimmel  and Memory’s Eyes by Cordelia Schmidt-Hellerau  in The Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association Volume 71 issue 1. pp. 141-149.
Click Below to Purchase The Distance from Home by Daniel Jacobs  on IPBooks.net
Click Below to Purchase Memory’s Eyes by Cordelia Schmidt-Hellerau on IPBooks.net

The Weekly Reader from the Yiddish Book Center

When was the last time you sat down and read an entire book of poetry? For many of us, I’m guessing, poetry just isn’t part of the regular reading diet. (I know it’s true for me.) National Poetry Month, celebrated every April since 1996, is a good reminder that there’s plenty of great poetry out there, and reading it is bound to be rewarding. But Yiddish poetry is far less frequently translated than Yiddish prose, even though the amount of Yiddish poetry that’s been written and published is vast. So, in honor of National Poetry Month—and because reading poetry is always a good idea—we’re going to highlight some of the more poetic items in our collection. Pull up your comfiest chair, relax, and enjoy!

Approaching the Asymptote

 

Although it doesn’t happen quite as often as we’d like, Yiddish poetry does receive recognition from the wider literary world. In its summer 2019 issue, the literary journal Asymptote devoted an entire section to Yiddish poetry, including translations of work by Yankev Glatshteyn, Itzik Manger, Debra Vogel, and Yermiyahu Ahron Taub, among others. On this episode of The Shmooze podcast, Alexander Dickow and Asymptote editor in chief Lee Yew Leong talk about editing that special edition.
Listen to a podcast episode with Alexander Dickow and Lee Yew Leong

Continue reading The Weekly Reader from the Yiddish Book Center