Robert M. Young Online Writings
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If you would like to submit feedback to
Bob Young on any of the books or essays within this archive then please click on the
"feedback" icon above (right) for a mail form or use this mailto link: Professor Robert M. Young. A
selection of comments on Darwin's Metaphor and Mental Space appear below:
Comments on Darwin's Metaphor
'His work on "The Historiographic and Ideological
Contexts of the Nineteenth-Century Debate on Man's Place in Nature" had an enormous
influence on me intellectually, and I was not alone among both junior and senior people in
the history of modern biology. That essay, and the other essays published in Darwin's
Metaphor remain gems in Darwin scholarship, representing the best in both humanely engaged
and careful research in the humanities and social analysis.
Donna Haraway Professor of the History of
Consciousness, University of California, Santa Cruz, author of Primate Visions and Simians, Cyborgs and Women
'...by far the most controversial figure in historical
Darwin scholarship, and a man who, in addition, may well be the most influential
practitioner in the history of the field.'
Ingemar Bohlin, University of Göteborg
'Young's writings provide, within the context of 'Science',
the best crical account of human nature theory...'
Christopher J. Berry, University of Glasgow, author
of Human Nature
Comments on Mental Space
'Your book is precious to me. It is superb... Your writing
is in every way outstanding... In Mental Space you have written a formidably erudite book,
a book rendered accessible to my pedestrian mind by the unusual clarity with which your
book is written.'
Harold Searles, psychoanalyst, author of Countertransference and My Work with Borderline Patients
'[In Mental Space Robert Young] ranges from foundational
issues (how to think about mental space itself) to such delicate and complex cultural
issues as racism, demonstrating throughout great sophistication and originality - without
ever losing a direct, conversational style that helps the reader to be consistently
engaged with the argument.'
E. V. Wolfenstein, psychoanalyst, political
scientist and author of The Victims of Democracy
'It is excellent as a discourse on psychoanalytic topics
that all butt up against other scientific, moral and political ones. It seems to me
extremely suited to the kind of student on the burgeoning university degrees, as it so
effectively claims a valid position for modern psychoanalytic ideas within the much wider
terrain of intellectual life.'
R. D. Hinshelwood, psychoanalyst, author of A
Dictionary of Kleinian Thought and What Happens in Groups
'I have now finished reading your book, finding it quite
fascinating, readable and important. There are not many people like you who combine a real
knowledge of philosophy, the history of ideas, sociology, etc. with psychoanalysis, so
that so many ideas that I had touched on were richly filled out. It also resonated of
course with the idea of the collective unconscious but brought down out of the cloud of
mythology into human existence... it is so full of information that I expect to be
referring to it frequently.'
Michael Fordham, Jungian analyst, co-editor of The
Collected Works of Jung, author of The Making of an Analyst
'I think it is a first rate and brilliant piece of work,
and an important contribution to the psychoanalytic literature, especially the section on
factors which restrict and foster mental space. I have made it required reading for all my
psychotherapy students.'
Brett Kahr, Lecturer in Psychotherapy, Regent's
College, London; author of Winnicott: A Biographical Portrait
'I finished reading your book on the flight home. I am
still very much under the impression of it. It inspired me, which is an experience I had
not had for a very long time. I keep re-reading parts of it and the more I do it, the more
deep meaning I discover. A major quality of this book is the easy way in which it
introduces major issues, its capacity of being academic yet vivacious. In a word, it
embodies what it argues for. Congratulations!'
Toma Tomov, President, Bulgarian Psychiatic
Association
'I have the feeling that I have known the essence of what
you are saying all my life... for me your book is full of thoughts that I hope to follow
through, and sources I hope to refer to; also your philosophic and political understanding
is a boon to me...'
Diana Bremner, psychotherapist, Lincoln Centre and
Institute for Psychotherapy
'It is a serious and well-executed attempt to locate
psychoanalysis, particularly Kleinian psychoanalysis, in the history of ideas, in culture
and in the social world, and to treat it in an interdisciplinary manner. To my knowledge
this is a unique undertaking. ...The discussion of groups and group processes is
particularly illuminating. The author admirably maps the development of such thinking,
which is too little known outside the world of group relations and group therapy and
points the way for future work in this area. A further strength of the book is the way in
which it places psychoanalysis in the history of ideas about the mind and human nature...
The chapters on psychotic anxieties, projective identification and countertransference are
models of exegesis. The writer's command of the literature, both psychoanalytic and
non-psychoanalytic, is enviable... The book speaks of much that ought to be regarded as
essential to any serious study in this area, yet is all too frequently ignored.
Paul Gordon, psychotherapist, Open Door, London;
formerly Reviews Editor, British Journal of Psychotherapy
'It has stimulated me as much as anything I have read in
some time.'
Charles Lloyd, theologian, Southern Methodist
University
'[Robert Young] has played a major role in the development
of psychoanalytic studies... As a teacher of psychoanalytic concepts, and of philosophical
and sociological ideas as they bear upon thinking about human nature, I would think he is
without equal. He combines a depth and scope of knowledge with an extraordinary facility
for producing lucid and telling synopses of bodies of work, and a unique alertness to the
connections and contrasts between different positions, both within psychoanalysis and
between psychoanalytic ideas and their correlates in the wider culture.'
Barry Richards, joint co-ordinator of the Tavistock
Clinic/University of East London MA in Psychoanalytic Studies, author of Images of
Freud and Disciplines of Delight
'I was captivated by brilliance wherever I looked. How I
admire and envy the clarity with which you can hold other people's ideas and present them
as the background of your own understanding of things... Reading the chapters on the
racial other, on transitional and cultural space, on the nature of the social influence
and the nature of intellectual and cultural endeavour... I don't think I have ever been as
clear about any of them before.
Josephine Klein, London Centre for Psychotherapy
'This book is an account of an extraordinary exploration in
which Young charts the various mental spaces which we can inhabit: cultural, mental,
analytic, primitive, projective, ambiguous and potential. By so mapping out mental worlds
Young offers a new synthesis of psychoanalytic thinking as it can interpenetrate our
cultural and social lives individually, in groups, in institutions and in society. With an
erudition spanning the psychoanalytic literature and cultural and historical studies he
has infused them with a new vitality that forces the reader to acknowledge that the
unconscious is part of everyday life and not just located in the consulting room. 'And
this is the great service that Young has rendered the reader. In a prose style that is not
off-putting, as much of the literature is couched in, he persistently places before us the
fact that we order our lives to avoid psychotic anxieties. Furthermore, he reaffirms the
Kleinian view that 'our group behaviour and institutional arrangements are quite
specifically and exquisitely designed to avoid consciously experiencing psychotic
anxieties' (p. 156). But he presents his thoughts not as bizarre undigested objects but as
necessary insights for understanding life in contemporary institutions and societies.
'There is an excitement present in the pages that evokes a fresh understanding of, for
instance, life in the workplace. Just as reading George Steiner or Lewis Mumford brings
alive the desire to try and make sense of life on the tragic plane, Young has conveyed a
considered perspective that lifts the reader from the trivial plane, to use a distinction
made by Arthur Koestler. Young offers no facile solutions for salvation from our
psycho-cultural "ills" but provides a model of, and for, trying to internalise
the social world as it is and persists in trying to understand the complexity of what we
conventionally call external reality through revelation - no matter how uncomfortable and
irksome to acknowledge. In making available his thinking, which is securely grounded in
psychoanalysis, he has pointed a way to illuminating the world of business and why, for
example, we have an unconscious tendency to select narcissistic leaders to run commercial
enterprises. At the same time, he offers the stoic hope that by enlarging and deepening
our understanding of mental space we may bring into being institutions and societies that
reflect the human wish to be creative and not completely destructive.'
Gordon Lawrence, group relations consultant,
Director of Imago East-West, author of Exploring Individual and Organisational
Behaviour and To Surprise the Soul
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