<i>Psychic Empire</i> presents a brilliant account of the porous boundaries between European modernist literature and psychiatric and psychoanalytic theories of the mind. Cate I. Reilly reads literature as scientific commentary and, conversely, scientific texts as fiction. This book provides historical depth to discussions on the place of literature today in the face of new technologies of the mind.
- Veronika Fuechtner, author of <i>Berlin Psychoanalytic: Psychoanalysis and Culture in Weimar Republic</i>,
<i>Psychic Empire</i> is a luminous book. Cate Reilly establishes the literary and historical epistemology of 'psychopower'—the quantification and popularization of mental health, with its pervasive, often pernicious effects. To follow her on the path through modernism in literature and psychopathology is to look anew at the influence of Central and Eastern Europe—and to understand how methods committed to ontologizing psychiatric illness carved out something more than a psychiatric unconscious: a literature that profiles meaning and negotiates it against the psyche. <i>Psychic Empire</i> offers a strikingly original approach to the hierarchies that determined the century we still endure.
- Stefanos Geroulanos, author of <i>The Invention of Prehistory: Empire, Violence, and Our Obsession with Human Origins</i>,
<i>Psychic Empire</i> is an imaginative and innovative work that examines anew the relationship between mind sciences and modernism. It powerfully tracks the moment of movement between psychic phenomena and generalizable concepts, between the individual and the body politic, as enshrined in classificatory systems such as the DSM. Showcasing writers excluded from the predominantly Anglophone modernist canon—and the laboratory of empirical psychology constituted by the German, Austro-Hungarian, Baltic, and Russian regions—it sheds brave new light on the literary toolkit of modernism.
- Ankhi Mukherjee, author of <i>Unseen City: The Psychic Lives of the Urban Poor</i>,
<i>Psychic Empire</i> is a stunning account of a new sovereignty in modernity built on objectively measurable minds; it is also a bravura conceptual argument for how modernist aesthetics reveal the disavowed presence of representation within the empirical modern self.
- Laura Salisbury, coeditor of <i>Neurology and Modernity: A Cultural History of Nervous Systems, 1800–1950</i>,
It necessitates reading for scholars working at the intersection of science and literature, in the neurohumanities, and those interested in new accounts of literary modernism. <i>Psychic Empire</i>, certainly, crucially intervenes in modernist studies.
The Modernist Review