Judith Le Soldat (1947-2008) was a Swiss psychoanalyst, researcher, lecturer and author. She was born in Budapest and lived in Zurich, where she studied psychology and ran her own psychoanalytic practice from 1974. Her first monograph Voluntary Servitude. Masochism and Morality was published in 1989. In her second monograph (1994), she presented an exciting, completely new understanding of Oedipal conflicts (see the critical edition of the book published in 2020 under the title Raubmord und Verrat - Robbery murder and betrayal). She worked on a third monograph on male homosexuality, but left it unfinished. The book was published posthumously in 2018 under the title Land of No Return. The lectures Judith Le Soldat gave at the University of Zurich in 2006/07 were also published posthumously. They appeared as the first volume of Le Soldat’s Collected Works in 2015 under the title Grund zur Homosexualität (Grounds for Homosexuality). Grounds for Homosexuality contains an introduction to both her theory of the Oedipal Conflicts and her theory of homosexuality and is therefore well suited as an introduction to her entire oeuvre. - Further publications by Judith Le Soldat, in German, s. www.lesoldat.ch
""In her brilliant monograph, Judith Le Soldat investigates and clearly distinguishes the clinical phenomena of individual masochism as well as the symptoms of socially produced masochism. In her lucid and profound analysis, she reveals the destinies of the individual’s inner drive-defence dynamics, but also traces different mechanisms of interplay between sociopolitical power and individual psyche. This masterpiece is an indispensable contribution to the psychoanalytic investigation of the intermediate realm (Zwischenreich) that connects the individual and society."" PD Markus Fäh, Ph.D., Zurich (Switzerland), Sigmund Freud Private University Vienna and Berlin. ""With impressive acumen, Le Soldat’s Voluntary Servitude, Masochism and Morality lays bare the intricacies of psyche and society as both reflect the Triebhaftigkeit (pulsionality) of the unconscious and its ever-robust survival in disguise of voluntary servitude. The death drive - an axiom of life, alongside Eros, doesn’t stay immune against social amnesia as it partakes in bolstering voluntary servitude. In dialog with Freud, La Boétie and Adorno the author raises fundamental questions on foundations of human cruelty, warfare, capitalism, populism, Nazism – uncannily reverberating from therapist’s consulting rooms to global crises. Intriguing and captivating - this book stands out as an absolute imperative in today’s psychoanalytic and sociopolitical discourse."" Elisabeth Geiger und Dr. Christoph Kappeler, analysts in their own practice, trained by Judith Le Soldat from the beginning of her career until 2008; both are faculty at Psychoanalytic Seminar Zürich.