Walls: Multidimensional Essays
M.H. Bowker
- Languages
- English
- BISAC subject codes
- BISAC: PHI015000, PSY026000
- Thema subject codes
- THEMA: DNL, DSA, JMAF, QDTM, QDTS
M.H. Bowker’s Walls is a contemplative essay that is sometimes playful and sometimes grave. At first blush, its subject matter would appear simple. Walls considers (1) the psychic meaning of walls and (2) the meaning of psychic walls. It turns out that these two subjects are intimately and interestingly related, such that meditating on one turns out to be fruitful in terms of our understanding of the other.
In a series of short, varied chapters Walls moves between the psychoanalytic consulting room and the border crossing, the philosophical treatise and the nursery rhyme. Bowker treats walls literally and metaphorically, from the “wall” between nature and civilization, to Franz Kafka’s musings on the Great Wall of China, then to the walling off of a person’s interior world. There is even a place for Humpty Dumpty. What emerges is a sustained meditation on interiority itself: How walls constitute the inside and outside of a self, how the barriers we raise in the psyche mirror and are mirrored by the walls we raise in the world.
In each of its short chapters, Walls has been written with an intention of inclusivity. That is, no advanced prior knowledge or specialized jargon is necessary for the reader to appreciate what may be found herein. This of course implies that, very often, the reader and the author find themselves beginning from first principles, which is always far more difficult than people seem to believe.
Biographies
Matthew H. Bowker was educated at Columbia University and the University of Maryland, College Park, and is the author of more than fifteen books and several dozen papers. He co-edits Routledge’s book series, Psychoanalytic Political Theory, as well as the Journal of Psycho-Social Studies (USA). Bowker’s primary research interests are critical psychosocial theory, literary criticism, and political philosophy. His latest books are The Angels Won’t Help You (punctum books), The Destroyed World and the Guilty Self: A Psychoanalytic Study of Culture and Politics (with D. Levine, Phoenix), Oblation — Essays, Parables, and Paradoxes (punctum books), and Getting Lost: Psycho-Political Withdrawal (with A. Buzby, Karnac).
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Genres
- Thought Experiments
Keywords
- borders
- essay
- interiority
- literary criticism
- philosophy of mind
- psychic space
- psychoanalysis
