
Eugen Bleuler`s Dementia Praecox or the Group
... as though they were ‘‘rare art objects.’’22 Eugen Bleuler’s attitude and working methods could not have been more different. In all likelihood, Bleuler was motivated to become a psychiatrist because of the frustration the local people of his Canton in Switzerland felt toward the foreign (primarily G ...
... as though they were ‘‘rare art objects.’’22 Eugen Bleuler’s attitude and working methods could not have been more different. In all likelihood, Bleuler was motivated to become a psychiatrist because of the frustration the local people of his Canton in Switzerland felt toward the foreign (primarily G ...
Nachträglichkeit: A Freudian perspective on delayed traumatic
... attributed to an external agent that will then be required to provide some form of restitution. Should less severe stressors be acknowledged to cause PTSD, then the causal emphasis risks being shifted away from the stressor towards personal predispositions and frailties. This would “undermine the ve ...
... attributed to an external agent that will then be required to provide some form of restitution. Should less severe stressors be acknowledged to cause PTSD, then the causal emphasis risks being shifted away from the stressor towards personal predispositions and frailties. This would “undermine the ve ...
Sample pages 2 PDF
... importance of the patient’s early interactions with parents and caregivers, given that these developmental experiences were crucial to the formation of the individual’s ego. As a result, in the 1940s a natural transition from ego psychology to objectrelations theory evolved. Melanie Klein (1882–1960 ...
... importance of the patient’s early interactions with parents and caregivers, given that these developmental experiences were crucial to the formation of the individual’s ego. As a result, in the 1940s a natural transition from ego psychology to objectrelations theory evolved. Melanie Klein (1882–1960 ...
here are "the syndrome of decay" (i.e,
... organization. Norman Brown in his study, Life Against Death, criticizes Fromm for substituting the "authoritarian character," as an autonomous spiritual attitude with no basis in the body, for Freud's concept ...
... organization. Norman Brown in his study, Life Against Death, criticizes Fromm for substituting the "authoritarian character," as an autonomous spiritual attitude with no basis in the body, for Freud's concept ...
7. Forensic Mental Health: Psychotherpeutic
... We can target our psychodynamic & psychopharmacological interventions • Thereby increasing our chances of treatment success in and out of custody ...
... We can target our psychodynamic & psychopharmacological interventions • Thereby increasing our chances of treatment success in and out of custody ...
Psychological Diseases
... Freud: The pursuit of "abnormal" sexual objects (or non-sexual organs) without repression. five forms of perversion disregarding the barrier of species (the gulf between men and animals), secondly, by overstepping the barrier against disgust, e.g. voyeur and exhibitionist against incest (the prohi ...
... Freud: The pursuit of "abnormal" sexual objects (or non-sexual organs) without repression. five forms of perversion disregarding the barrier of species (the gulf between men and animals), secondly, by overstepping the barrier against disgust, e.g. voyeur and exhibitionist against incest (the prohi ...
Chapter 10 Personality
... • No thought given to women • The unconscious mind is not as smart/purposeful as Freud would like us to believe ...
... • No thought given to women • The unconscious mind is not as smart/purposeful as Freud would like us to believe ...
Freud and the Political - Unbound – Harvard Journal of the Legal Left
... One may say that for psychoanalysis there is no such thing as an individual, the individual only makes sense as a knot of social ties, a network of relations to the others, to the always already social Other—the Other being ultimately but a shorthand for the social instance as such. Subjectivity can ...
... One may say that for psychoanalysis there is no such thing as an individual, the individual only makes sense as a knot of social ties, a network of relations to the others, to the always already social Other—the Other being ultimately but a shorthand for the social instance as such. Subjectivity can ...
influenced his thinking about personality?
... and the talking cure but was unsuccessful. During treatment, Emmy Von N. suggested that Freud allow her to speak freely, without interruption. ...
... and the talking cure but was unsuccessful. During treatment, Emmy Von N. suggested that Freud allow her to speak freely, without interruption. ...
Mervin Glasser - Nicolas de Coulon
... experience that was to be invaluable when he left to join the Portman. His work continued after retirement from the Portman. He researched and published with former Portman colleagues on the "act of violence". A retrospective report (in collaboration with Professor Issi Kolvin, Don Campbell and othe ...
... experience that was to be invaluable when he left to join the Portman. His work continued after retirement from the Portman. He researched and published with former Portman colleagues on the "act of violence". A retrospective report (in collaboration with Professor Issi Kolvin, Don Campbell and othe ...
LUCIAN FREUD PORTRAITS Teachers` Notes
... completed over many sittings. Using a life model, take time over a drawing a variety of compositions. Use dynamic lighting to cast dramatic shadows or paint from a particular viewpoint such as from below the model or from above the model. Take photographs to record each pose. Make thumbnail sketches ...
... completed over many sittings. Using a life model, take time over a drawing a variety of compositions. Use dynamic lighting to cast dramatic shadows or paint from a particular viewpoint such as from below the model or from above the model. Take photographs to record each pose. Make thumbnail sketches ...
The Catcher in the Rye
... The unconscious is the sum of the individual’s repressed desires, fears, and traumas that, while an individual is never fully conscious of them, can be revealed through dreams, free association, or Freudian slips—mistakes in speech that reveal subconscious thoughts. (Ex: A man with an addiction to b ...
... The unconscious is the sum of the individual’s repressed desires, fears, and traumas that, while an individual is never fully conscious of them, can be revealed through dreams, free association, or Freudian slips—mistakes in speech that reveal subconscious thoughts. (Ex: A man with an addiction to b ...
Literature and Psychoanalysis 2011-12
... b. Letter to Fliess (on the concept of translation), 6th Dec. 1896, Freud-Fliess Letters, ed. Masson (pp. 207-9). Photocopy provided. 2. Jean Laplanche, “The Unfinished Copernican Revolution” in Essays on Otherness, ed. J. Fletcher, Routledge, 1999. 3. Jean Laplanche, “Towards a General Theory of S ...
... b. Letter to Fliess (on the concept of translation), 6th Dec. 1896, Freud-Fliess Letters, ed. Masson (pp. 207-9). Photocopy provided. 2. Jean Laplanche, “The Unfinished Copernican Revolution” in Essays on Otherness, ed. J. Fletcher, Routledge, 1999. 3. Jean Laplanche, “Towards a General Theory of S ...
Psychoanalysis and Literature
... Each student will give at least one oral report, of no more than ten minutes, on a suggested or required reading assignment. The oral report should be given from notes, not read. Each student will write two papers, of about ten pages each. Students should write papers in two of the following three c ...
... Each student will give at least one oral report, of no more than ten minutes, on a suggested or required reading assignment. The oral report should be given from notes, not read. Each student will write two papers, of about ten pages each. Students should write papers in two of the following three c ...
freud and hysteria : the case of dora
... One of the cases of hysteria treated by Freud is the case of "DORA" described in the book "five psychoanalyses" in the first chapter. Dora, an eighteen-year-old girl, suffered from strange symptoms since a child: depression, anxiety, unsociable behaviour, cough, aphasia. Any doctor wouldn't have man ...
... One of the cases of hysteria treated by Freud is the case of "DORA" described in the book "five psychoanalyses" in the first chapter. Dora, an eighteen-year-old girl, suffered from strange symptoms since a child: depression, anxiety, unsociable behaviour, cough, aphasia. Any doctor wouldn't have man ...
Ch13zz
... traumas often caused by family member • His conclusion: seduction traumas caused adult neurotic behavior • Widely ridiculed at the meeting and withdrew his remarks one year later • Scholars still wonder if his reversal was a genuine admission of error or an attempt to sterilize psychoanalysis for th ...
... traumas often caused by family member • His conclusion: seduction traumas caused adult neurotic behavior • Widely ridiculed at the meeting and withdrew his remarks one year later • Scholars still wonder if his reversal was a genuine admission of error or an attempt to sterilize psychoanalysis for th ...
Basic Psychological Theories
... social consequences by influencing health policy; social policy; forensic decisions; and the economics of the mental health professions. ...
... social consequences by influencing health policy; social policy; forensic decisions; and the economics of the mental health professions. ...
Basic Theories psychological theories outline
... social consequences by influencing health policy; social policy; forensic decisions; and the economics of the mental health professions. ...
... social consequences by influencing health policy; social policy; forensic decisions; and the economics of the mental health professions. ...
SIGMUND FREUD Dr. Wilfried Daim* On the 6th May 1856 Sigmund
... The consequential behaviour following on the recognition of this fact would be heroic nihilism, — t o fight for life although one knows that one must be defeated in the end. This attitude reminds, curiously enogh, German mythology, rather than Jewish or Chris-, tian, both of whom teach the final vic ...
... The consequential behaviour following on the recognition of this fact would be heroic nihilism, — t o fight for life although one knows that one must be defeated in the end. This attitude reminds, curiously enogh, German mythology, rather than Jewish or Chris-, tian, both of whom teach the final vic ...
Mr. Jones
... painful consequences (e.g., engaged, unrestrained buying sprees, sexual indiscretions, foolish business investments) 3. Mood disturbance is sufficiently severe to cause marked impairment in occupational functioning or in usual social activities or relationship with others, or to necessitate hospital ...
... painful consequences (e.g., engaged, unrestrained buying sprees, sexual indiscretions, foolish business investments) 3. Mood disturbance is sufficiently severe to cause marked impairment in occupational functioning or in usual social activities or relationship with others, or to necessitate hospital ...