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digest 2002-11-15 #001.txt
litsci-l-digest Friday, November 15 2002 Volume 01 : Number
023
In this issue:
_Free Associations_ No. 51 has appeared
Call for papers: Feminist Theory and/of Science
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Date: Mon, 21 Oct 2002 10:00:59 +0100
From: Robert Maxwell Young
Subject: _Free Associations_ No. 51 has appeared
Volume 9, Part 4 (Number 51) of the quarterly journal
_Free Associations: Psychoanalysis, Groups, Politics, Culture_
has appeared
I very much hope that subscribers to this egroup will feel inclined
to subscribe to this journal and, if appropriate, will persuade their
institutional library to do so. _Free Associations_ is a leading
periodical
in the non-clinical aspects of psychoanalysis and addresses conceptual
and contextual issues relevant the psychoanalytic approach to human
nature.
CONTENTS
'Countering the Reality of Gravity: Literary Invitations to
Alternative
Psychotherapeutic Understanding' by Angus Macmillan
'Dramatherapy and Psychosis: Symbol Formation and Dramatic Distance'
by Maggie McAlister=7F
'Loss and Re-creation of Faith in Freud's Life' by Ryan LaMothe
'Time and Space as "Necessary Forms of Thought"' by Kelly Noel-Smith
'Beginnings: A Self Psychological Interface Between Psychoanalysis and
Christianity- A Personal Point of View' by John A Sloane
'Tragedy, Catharsis and Creativity: From Aristotle to Freud to
Winnicott=
'
by David Wells
BOOK REVIEW _Psychoanalysis: A Critical Introduction_ by Ian
Craib, Reviewed by Simon Clarke
The journal's web site is at http://human-nature.com/free-associations/
where a number of articles, reviews and entire manuscripts of books
are available, along with a list of the contents of all back issues.
There are many useful links and writings on human nature available at
the parent web site http://www.human-nature.com
which is now one of the top 2000 web sites (for hits) of the all the
34 million ones on the web.
The editors of the web site welcome nominations for links and for
material to be placed on the relevant portions of the site. Write to
Dr. Ian Pitchford
ian.pitchford@scientist.com
or Prof. Robert Young
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
Subscription to _Free Associations_ is for four issues beginning with
any number.
Individual:
UK - 40 UK pounds; 54 Euros
Overseas - 50 GB pounds; 80 Euros
Institutional:
UK - 80 UK pounds; 128 Euros
Overseas - 90 UK pounds; 144 Euros
Individual copies and back issues:
No 48 and after - 10 UK pounds; 16 Euros
No 47 and earlier - 8 UK pounds; 12.89 Euros
If you want to pay in another currency, you can do so by using a credit
card=
=2E
Order from Karnac Books
6 Pembridge Building10
London NW3 6RE
Subscribe online at http://www.karnacbooks.com/find.asp?p=3D1&
Queries to: leenahakkinen@hotmail.com
Tel. +44 (0)20 8969 4454
=46ax. +44 (0)20 8969 5585
Robert Maxwell Young, Prof. Emeritus of Psychotherapy &
Psychoanalytic Studies, Centre for Psychotherapeutic Studies, Univ.
of Sheffield, http://www.shef.ac.uk/~psysc/
Co-Director, Bulgarian Institute of Human Relations & Honoured Prof.,
New Bulgarian Univ., Sofia. http://www.nbu.bg/bihr/psy.htm
Home: 26 Freegrove Rd., London N7 9RQ. tel. +44 207 607 8306
Private Practice, Consultation, Supervision
Web Site & Writings http://www.human-nature.com
r.m.young@sheffield.ac.uk, robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
'One must imagine Sisyphus happy.' - Camus
Please put 'Message for Robert Young' in the Subject line.
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http://www.law.duke.edu/sls
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 2002 20:45:42 +0000
From: "Carol Colatrella"
Subject: Call for papers: Feminist Theory and/of Science
Call for Papers: Feminist Theory
Special Issue: Feminist Theory and/of Science
Guest Editor: Susan M. Squier
Articles are invited that consider the relations between feminist theory
and
science, as well as feminist theories of science. Essays may vary in
subject
area and methodology. Literary, historical, and/or visual and cultural
studies approaches, sociological and anthropological approaches, as well
as
perspectives from the scientific disciplines, are encouraged. Possible
subjects of exploration
include: feminist theory and the biological body and brain; the limits
of
materiality; the limits of social construction; feminist theories of
information and communication technology (ICT); is there a feminist
science?
Is there a scientific feminism? Discourses of science and feminist
theory;
feminist science studies or queer science studies: what are the
differences?
What is the role of literature in
feminist theory / in feminist science studies? How does feminist theory
respond to the risk society? How does feminism understand the categories
of
gender, race, class, disability, and/or species as they are constituted
and/
or deployed in scientific practice? Is a ?´non-modern?? feminist science
studies possible? What are the essential texts for feminist theory of
science? What practices characterize
feminist science studies or the feminist theory of science?
Feminist Theory is a peer-reviewed journal and all articles will be
subject
to the usual refereeing process. Six copies should be submitted.
Author??s
names and biographical notes should appear only on a cover sheet, and
all
identifiers in the text should be masked so that manuscripts can be
reviewed
anonymously. Each article should be accompanied by an abstract and
keywords
and a brief
biographical note. Articles should be typed double spaced, with
references
in the Harvard Style and substantive footnotes at the end of the
article.
Manuscript length should be between 6,000 and 8,000 words.
Detailed notes for contributors are available on request from the
Feminist
Theory office: email feminist.theory@york.ac.uk Other inquiries should
be
directed to the issue editor by e-mail, at sxs62@psu.edu
This special issue will review only unpublished manuscripts that are not
simultaneously under review for publication elsewhere.
Deadline for submissions: December 15, 2003.
Manuscripts should be clearly marked ?´Special Issue?? and sent either
to
Feminist Theory, Centre for Women??s Studies, University of York,
Heslington,
York YO10 5DD or, in the case of North American authors, to Susan
Squier, PO
Box 557, 211 Miller Lane, Boalsburg, PA 16827, USA.
Susan Squier is Brill Professor of Women??s Studies and English at the
Pennsylvania State University, where she is a member of the Science,
Medicine, Technology and Culture group and the Disability Studies group
of
the Rock Ethics Institute. She has served as President of the Society
for
Literature and Science, and is currently on its Executive Board. Among
her
publications are: Babies in Bottles: Twentieth-Century Visions of
Reproductive Technology, Playing Dolly: Technocultural Formations,
Fantasies
and Fictions of Assisted Reproduction (edited with E. Ann Kaplan), Arms
and
the Woman: War, Gender, and Literary Representation (co-edited with
Helen
Cooper and Adrienne Munich). Her edited collection, Communities of the
Air:
Radio Century, Radio Culture, is forthcoming in 2003 from Duke
University
Press. In summer 2002, she co-directed (with Anne Hunsaker Hawkins) the
National Endowment for the Humanities summer institute on ?¨Literature,
Medicine and Culture?Æ at Penn State University Hershey Medical Center.
_________________________________________________________________
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------------------------------
End of litsci-l-digest V1 #23
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Please see the following URL for the LITSCI-L archive, Web resource
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