Home
:
Book details
:
Book description
Description of
James Joyce and the Internal World of the Replacement Child (Routledge Focus on Mental Health)
This book is an exploration of the internal world of James Joyce with particular emphasis on his being born into his parents grief at the loss of their firstborn son, offering a new perspective on his emotional difficulties. Mary Adams links Joyces profound sense of guilt and abandonment with the trauma of being a replacement child and compares his experience with that of two psychoanalytic cases, as well as with Freud and other well-known figures who were replacement children. Issues such as survivor guilt, sibling rivalry, the illegitimate replacement son, and the dead mother syndrome are discussed. Joyce is seen as maturing from a paranoid, fearful state through his writing, his intelligence, his humour and his sublime poetic sensibility. By escaping the oppressive aspects of life in Dublin, in exile he could find greater emotional freedom and a new sense of belonging. A quality of claustrophobic intrusive identification in Read more