
Contents
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Psychoanalysis, Crime, and Culpability Psychoanalysis, Crime, and Culpability
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The Criminal at Midcentury The Criminal at Midcentury
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Psychoanalysis before the Law Psychoanalysis before the Law
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Anti-Oedipus Anti-Oedipus
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The Political Unconscious The Political Unconscious
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Psychopathy Psychopathy
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Four Psychoanalysis before the Law
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Published:August 2017
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Abstract
This chapter traces a debate spawned by professor of criminal psychology Muhammad Fathi, while paying particular attention to the social role of the criminal at midcentury. It argues that the convergences or divergences found between psychoanalysis and the law were in part related to disputes regarding the causal nature of crime. Further complicating these debates was the juridical status of psychoanalysis itself as it struggled to assert its autonomy as a field of therapeutic practice within the Egyptian legal system. At the center of all of these arguments lay the criminal, themselves increasingly enmeshed within new legal and forensic practices, as well as multiple legal regimes over the course of the twentieth century.
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