What Psychoanalysis Says About Homosexuality is a work that exposes different theoretical, critical, clinical and cultural aspects around male homosexuality. These are presented from a Freudian and Lacanian perspective, without leaving aside what other scholars and psychoanalysts have developed regarding such a well-known but little understood topic. Thus, this book opens with a chapter dedicated to a “psi” history of male homosexuality which goes through to different current dumps on gender politics and queer theories. However, substantial sections of it focus on what both Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan developed around male homoeroticism. Both approaches are mainly theoretical in nature although they do not fail to expose their clinical aspects, which are presented in a chronological, logical and thematic manner. Finally, this work closes with two appendices that are relevant to ps...read more