Psychoanalysis and Culture: A Kleinian PerspectivePsychology Press, 1999 - 226 pages Annotation. This book, part of the Tavistock Clinic Series provides along-overdue view of the relationship of psychoanalysis to culture. Uniquely positioned to bridge the gap that exists between clinical and academic psychoanalytic studies, it is dedicated to the work of Hanna Segal. With contributions from leading international psychoanalysts, philosophers and sociologists. |
Table des matières
Psychoanalysis a Body of Knowledge of Mind | 1 |
Art and Literature | 7 |
An Exploration | 27 |
Madame Bovary | 48 |
A Place in Mind | 64 |
The Cover Up for Oedipus | 86 |
The Last Modernism | 105 |
Emotion and the Malformation of Emotion | 122 |
Pride | 136 |
Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Migration | 154 |
In the End is My Beginning | 170 |
A Study | 189 |
References | 209 |
Select Bibliography of the Work of Hanna Segal | 219 |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Psychoanalysis and Culture: A Kleinian Perspective David Bell (Psychoanalyst) Aucun aperçu disponible - 1999 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
able accept achieve analysis anxieties appear attack attempt awareness become beginning believe brings capacity character child clear clinical complex continue contribution course culture death defences dependence depressive depressive position described desire discussed distinct effect Elegies Emma emotion example existence experience expression face fact fantasy father fear feelings felt figures finally Freud frustration function give going guilt human hypnotist idea important individual inner internal Jocasta Journal Klein later live London look loss Marlow means mental mind mother nature never object observation Oedipus origins pain parents patient person phantasy play position possible present pride projective psychic psychoanalysis reality reason refers relation relationship represent response result Rilke seems Segal sense shows situation social Society structure suggestion theory things thought tion Tiresias treatment truth turn understanding