Everybody: A Book about Freedom
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- $13.99
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
"Astute and consistently surprising critic" (NPR) Olivia Laing investigates the body and its discontents through the great freedom movements of the twentieth century.
The body is a source of pleasure and of pain, at once hopelessly vulnerable and radiant with power. In her ambitious, brilliant sixth book, Olivia Laing charts an electrifying course through the long struggle for bodily freedom, using the life of the renegade psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich to explore gay rights and sexual liberation, feminism, and the civil rights movement.
Drawing on her own experiences in protest and alternative medicine, and traveling from Weimar Berlin to the prisons of McCarthy-era America, Laing grapples with some of the most significant and complicated figures of the past century—among them Nina Simone, Christopher Isherwood, Andrea Dworkin, Sigmund Freud, Susan Sontag, and Malcolm X.
Despite its many burdens, the body remains a source of power, even in an era as technologized and automated as our own. Arriving at a moment in which basic bodily rights are once again imperiled, Everybody is an investigation into the forces arranged against freedom and a celebration of how ordinary human bodies can resist oppression and reshape the world.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Novelist and critic Laing (Crudo) places the life and legacy of psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich (1897–1957) at the center of this impassioned and provocative study of "the vexed relationship between bodies and freedom." Laing highlights Reich's development of body-based psychotherapy to help patients release their emotional pain, and his conflicts with Sigmund Freud, an early mentor, over the inhibition of sexual desire (Freud thought sex was "an unruly, dangerous force"; Reich believed it to be "the foundation of emotional health"). She also delves into Reich's efforts to "fuse" psychotherapy and Marxism and his criminal prosecution for claiming that he could cure cancer by harnessing a tangible "life force" he called orgone. Along the way, Laing folds in reflections on her own experiences undergoing Reich's bodywork therapy and her reaction, as the child of a "bona fide lesbian household," to the passage of a 1988 law banning positive discussions of homosexuality in U.K. schools. Detours into the lives of Christopher Isherwood, Andrea Dworkin, Susan Sontag, and Nina Simone illuminate the influence of Reich's theories, which Laing boils down to two "durable truths": human bodies carry personal and inherited trauma, and people are "porous and capable of mysterious effects on each other's lives." This lucid foray into some of life's deepest questions astonishes.