4 8 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 14, 1988 thing provided by science to mask their own voracious will to power and deny the highly biased nature of their ostensibly objective accounts. wth The chief culprit in Porter's in- gallery of medical tricksters is Freud. fo- Freud-bashing has become quite for popular lately, and, as Porter lucidly :ked demonstrates, with good reason. kes Porter's analysis of the sexism the informing Freud's infamous di- his agnosis of Dora and scandalous dual treatment of Emma Eckstein is de- vastating. He concludes, with turn- nse of-the-century feminist Charlotte and Perkins Gilman, that Freud's theories very represent "the resurgence of phallic wri- worship set before us in the solemn and phraseology of psychoanalysis." and The Freud sections of the book are the those in which Porter comes closest heir to expanding his survey beyond individual case histories into a broa- the der social arena. Even here, however, rery his insights are more often banal tors generalities about the "patriarchal" sent nature of Freud's society than in- clo- depth pictures of how that patriarchy imagined itself and repressed its victims. Furthermore, Porter's analysis again ignores the problem of class by by-passing the ground-breaking work of theorists such as Peter Stallybrass and Allon White, whose Poetics and Politics of Trangressions argues that Freud's middle-class theo- ries of family romance are predicted upon his marginalization of ties to the servants who were an important part of his childhood. Porter's analysis of Freud is a microcosm of the strengths and weaknesses of the book as a whole, and demonstrates why, for all its pro- blems, it is still worth reading. By calling into question how normalcy is defined as well as the assumptions of those who define it, Porter's highly readable prose challanges our convictions regarding just what normalcy is. If he is less successful in showing the historical reasons governing why various societies conceive of madness as they do, his tale of injustices rendered make the reader "mad" enough to search for the connections and answers Porte, himself fails to provide. -Mike Fischer 4 4 Is Your Car Sick? Find the right doctor to fix it right here in the CAR PAGE Every Thursday in The Michigan Daily M0 Who works as late as you do? When you need copies after hours, depend on Kinko s. We're open late for your last minute emergencies. kinko 's 540 E. Liberty 761-4539 1220 S. University 747-9070 Michigan Union 662-1222 4, 4 Casio continues to give students and professionals the most features and functions for the fewest dollars. Lesson 1: Our FX-451M gives you 132 total functions, includ- ing binary, octal and hexadecimal calculations and conversions. At the touch of a key, it provides you with 13 commonly used physical constants like the speed of light,, Planck's constant and atomic mass. It gives you 16 metric conversion functions too, as well as a 10 digit display with 10 digit mantissa plus 2 digit exponent for greater accuracy. Lesson 2: Our less expen- sive FX-115N also features Solar Plus and a 10 digit display with 10 digit mantissa plus 2 digit exponent. It offers you 116 functions, includ- ing statistics and computer math calculations, and it even calculates fractions. Both our FX-451 M and FX-115N come with a handy, comprehensive application book.' 1001, take a lesson in economics from Casio's FX-451 M, FX-115N, and FX-300. You'll be amazed, not just by how much they can do, but by how little they'll do it for. ,a 4 CASIO. Where miracles never cease (" gr'ui Inr l( rir'ctz mtr r rnraii ur' f hivcinn- R7C1 At Dlogrnt Aklto nnv r NI.I Cl7Qfll I E A