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Mourning After Freud
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01 September 2026

Argues that Freud and a host of twentieth-century writers after him conceptualize mourning as a matter of "hypertranslation," an essentially linguistic endeavor.
Mourning After Freud offers new insight into a much-discussed but not yet exhausted topic of twentieth-century discourse. Whereas contemporary trauma theorists have identified interiorization as the central feature of Freud's theory of loss, Birger Vanwesenbeeck argues that Freud above all conceptualizes mourning as a form of translation and, more precisely, of "hypertranslation"—a translation of an unavailable original. Foregrounding the role of language in Freud's thought, the book reveals, provocatively, that the true heirs of his model are to be found not in psychoanalysis or trauma theory but rather in contiguous fields such as deconstruction, African American writing, and second-generation US immigrant literature more broadly. Through a series of close readings of twentieth-century theorists, poets, and novelists—from W. E. B. Du Bois to Sylvia Plath, from Henry Roth to Jacques Derrida—Mourning After Freud reveals time and again that the question of mourning cannot be separated from that of language.
"Fresh and compelling, Mourning After Freud makes an innovative contribution to discussions of mourning and translation. In developing the concept of 'hypertranslation,' Vanwesenbeeck extends these discussions beyond the familiar terrain of psychoanalysis and deconstruction to African American literary and theoretical traditions, drawing out the shared philosophical stakes of these rarely juxtaposed discourses. Mourning After Freud is not only well-researched and convincing in its attention to detail, with an impressive command of its subject matter, but also a pleasure to read." — Roland Végső, author of Worldlessness After Heidegger: Phenomenology, Psychoanalysis, Deconstruction