In his book, The Designed Self: Psychoanalysis and Contemporary Identities, Dr. Carol Strenger, a philosopher, psychologist, and analyst, presents us with his vision of psychoanalysis from his work in an Israeli urban society with the segment of the population known as Generation X. His case presentations illustrate the divide between the generations and their cultures....this is a well written and enjoyable work to be recommended to all who work with patients, especially, those who work with young adults.
-The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
There are many excellent features in this book. Strenger is clearly comfortable with philosophical traditions from Nietzsche to Derrida, Rorty to Sloterdijk. He is authoritative in his handling of a variety of psychoanalytic practices from Freud through Lacan to the intersubjective and relational approaches.
-International Journal of Psychoanalysis
Carlo Strenger has written an engaging and truly original book that offers some provocative ideas about reconstructing psychoanalysis in the context of a fast-changing world. Strenger argues persuasively that the culture of 'Generation X' is very different from that in which psychoanalysis evolved, or even that with which the middle-aged analyst of today is familiar. With compelling clinical examples and wide-ranging scholarship and erudition, Strenger puts forth a vision of a psychoanalysis that innovates, like the new generation itself, without giving up its connection to its own tradition. This book is essential reading for all therapists who want to stay current with the lives of their patients.
- Neil Altman, Ph.D., Editor, Psychoanalytic Dialogues
With intellectual and stylistic grace, Carlo Strenger weaves a seamless web of good story and compelling thought. Open to the changing cosmos he and his patients inhabit, he speaks with equal ease of clinical process, psychotherapeutic technique, and theories philosophical, social, and psychoanalytic. Continuing in the cosmopolitan tradition of Civilization and Its Discontents, The Designed Self shows us the dialectical process by which psychoanalysis illuminates and changes the very world it belongs to and is thereby changed itself.
- Muriel Dimen, Ph.D., Author, Sexuality, Intimacy, Power (Analytic Press, 2003)
Strenger challenges psychoanalysis and culture, daring us to live in new ways yet not to leave ourselves behind. The Designed Self is not only an edifying read but a thoroughly enjoyable one.
- Michael Eigen, Ph.D., Editor, The Psychoanalytic Review