KEVIN DONNELLY suggests that the task of transforming cultural spaces is far from over and that photography still has a key role to play
Psychoanalysis and Revolution
by Ian Parker & David Pavon-Cuellar
1968 Press £9.99
POPULAR notions of the purpose and practice of psychoanalysis were established in the golden age of Hollywood. In Spellbound (1945), Dr Constance Petersen, played by Ingrid Bergman, uses psychoanalytic techniques to resolve inner turmoil and enable a dysfunctional individual to come to terms with social reality.
Ian Parker and David Pavon-Cuellar reject the notion of psychoanalysis as a means of inward reflection. Instead, they reclaim it as a process of collective struggle, setting it in opposition to the cycle of accumulation and profit in which society is trapped.
ANDY HEDGECOCK welcomes an entertaining, useful guide to the threats and promises of mathematical rationality
MARTIN HALL examines the way the Roman orator took on different schools of philosophy
The selection, analysis and interpretation of historical ‘facts’ always takes place within a paradigm, a model of how the world works. That’s why history is always a battleground, declares the Marx Memorial Library
JAN WOOLF is beguiled by the tempting notion that Freud psychoanalysed Hitler in a comedy that explores the vulnerability of a damaged individual


