
New Books Network Mary Edwards, "Sartre’s Existential Psychoanalysis: Knowing Others" (Bloomsbury, 2022)
Nov 23, 2025
Mary Edwards, a philosophy lecturer at Cardiff University, dives into the intriguing intersections between Sartre’s existentialism and psychoanalysis. She discusses Sartre's unconventional views on the self as a constructive fiction and how knowing others can sometimes reveal more truth than our self-perception. Edwards elaborates on Sartre's dialectical methods and his exploration of shame, highlighting his insights on freedom and ethics. With a focus on Flaubert, she reveals how literary critique can validate psychoanalytic theories, all while emphasizing the therapeutic implications in today's context.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Existentialism Is Radically Social
- Sartre's later work reframes existentialism as fundamentally social rather than starting from isolated subjectivity.
- Mary Edwards argues this social turn synthesizes existentialism, Marxism and psychoanalysis to deepen freedom's account.
The Ego: Helpful Delusion, Hidden Prison
- Sartre treats the ego as a useful fiction that shields us from the vertigo of unlimited possibility.
- The self-conception protects life but can imprison us in roles imposed by society, blocking authentic development.
Shame As Revelation Of Being-For-Others
- Shame for Sartre is a structural revelation: I appear as an object to another subject, creating triangular consciousness.
- This experience shows our being 'outside' ourselves and reveals limits on self-control and freedom.







