Jacqueline Rose

Jacqueline Rose, is one of the most influential and provocative scholars working in the humanities today, she has written extensively on a range of topics including feminism, motherhood, politics, and psychoanalysis.

Her work includes: 

Rose, Jacqueline (1993). The case of Peter Pan, or, The impossibility of children's fiction. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. 
Rose, Jacqueline (translator and editor); Lacan, Jacques (author); Mitchell, Juliet (editor) (1985). Feminine sexuality: Jacques Lacan and the école freudienne. New York London: Pantheon Books W.W. Norton.
Rose, Jacqueline (2013) [1991]. The haunting of Sylvia Plath. London: Virago.
Rose, Jacqueline (editor) (1993). Why war?: psychoanalysis, politics, and the return to Melanie Klein. Oxford, UK Cambridge, Mass., USA: B. Blackwell.
Rose, Jacqueline (1996), "Feminine sexuality", in Jackson, Stevi; Scott, Sue, Feminism and sexuality: a reader, New York: Columbia University Press, pp. 74–78.
Rose, Jacqueline (1996). States of fantasy. The Clarendon Lectures in English Literature. Oxford England New York: Clarendon Press Oxford University Press.
Rose, Jacqueline (2002). Albertine. London: Vintage. ISBN  (novel)
Rose, Jacqueline (2004). On not being able to sleep: psychoanalysis and the modern world. London: Vintage. 
Rose, Jacqueline (2005). Sexuality in the field of vision. London New York: Verso. 
Rose, Jacqueline (2005). The question of Zion. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
Rose, Jacqueline (2013) [2007]. The last resistance. London: Verso. 
Rose, Jacqueline (2011). Proust among the nations: from Dreyfus to the Middle East. Chicago London: The University of Chicago Press. 
Rose, Jacqueline (2014). Women in dark times. London: Bloomsbury.