Darian Leader is a British psychoanalyst and author known for his accessible writings on psychoanalysis. His notable works include Introducing Lacan (2000) and What is Madness? (2011). In psychiatry, Leader has contributed to understanding mental health and criticised drug-based treatments.
Darian Leader was born in 1965 and attended St Paul's School in London. He studied philosophy at Downing College, Cambridge, where his interest in psychoanalysis began. "The Lacanian way seemed the most serious and scientific," he remarked.
After his time at Cambridge, Leader moved to Paris to continue his studies, where he obtained a Master's degree in the history of science from Paris VIII and trained as a psychoanalyst. He lived in Paris for nine years, a period which had a profound influence on his intellectual development and clinical practice.
Darian Leader is a founding member of the Centre for Freudian Analysis and Research (CFAR) and has held several prominent positions, including President of the College of Psychoanalysts and Trustee of the Freud Museum. In recognition of his work, he was awarded the Mercier Chair at the University of Louvain in 2015.
Leader's first significant publication was Lacan for Beginners (1995), later titled Introducing Lacan. This book provided an overview of Jacques Lacan's complex theories, making them accessible to a wider audience. Leader's ability to simplify psychoanalytic concepts that are often considered dense and esoteric is a hallmark of his writing. His works seamlessly bridge high and low culture, using examples from art, cinema, literature and real-life case studies to illustrate psychoanalytic ideas.
Other works include Stealing the Mona Lisa: What Art Stops Us From Seeing (2002), which explores the role of art in society and the human psyche, and Why Do People Get Ill? (2007), co-authored with David Corfield, which explores the mind-body connection in illness. Leader has also written extensively about grief and depression, most notably in The New Black: Grief, Melancholia and Depression (2008).
In What is Madness, Leader criticises the growing dominance of pharmaceutical solutions in the treatment of mental health problems and advocates a deeper understanding of the human mind through psychoanalysis. He has consistently spoken out against the oversimplification of mental health.
Darian Leader lives in London.