The Omnipotent State of Mind
Psychoanalytic Perspectives
Herausgeber: Arundale, Jean
The Omnipotent State of Mind
Psychoanalytic Perspectives
Herausgeber: Arundale, Jean
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This book presents an examination and exploration of the concept of omnipotence, its qualities and expression as a psychic state, its origins in the psyche and its appearance in the psychoanalytic process and in society.
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This book presents an examination and exploration of the concept of omnipotence, its qualities and expression as a psychic state, its origins in the psyche and its appearance in the psychoanalytic process and in society.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. Juni 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 540g
- ISBN-13: 9781032027937
- ISBN-10: 1032027932
- Artikelnr.: 63197840
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. Juni 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 540g
- ISBN-13: 9781032027937
- ISBN-10: 1032027932
- Artikelnr.: 63197840
Jean Arundale, PhD, is a training and supervising analyst of the British Psychoanalytic Association and author of the book Identity, Narcissism, and the Other (Routledge). She is also co-editor of Transference and Countertransference and Interpretive Voices (both Routledge).
Introduction In the beginning . . . 1. The survival function of primitive
omnipotence 2. The thumb-in-the-mouth phantasy and the capacity to love 3.
Peter Pan, the omnipotent child In the adolescent . . . 4. Omnipotence in
adolescence 5. Customising the body: From omnipotence to autonomy In the
adult . . . 6. On three forms of thinking: Magical thinking, dream
thinking, and transformative thinking 7. The appeal of omnipotence 8. A
neuropsychoanalytic note on omnipotence 9. The relinquishment of
omnipotence in a severely traumatised patient 10. Possessed by a cruel God:
The damaging effect of an omnipotent internal object 11. From patients to
presidents: The Grand Illusion Why is omnipotence so difficult to give up?
12. Overcoming obstacles in analysis: Is it possible to relinquish
omnipotence and accept receptive femininity? 13. Omnipotence and the
difficulty in relinquishing it The desire for power in culture and society
. . . 14. Omnipotence and the paradoxes of insight: A Darwinian look 15.
Lear, Kane and the workings of omnipotence 16. Applying my theory of
psychosis to the Nazi phenomenon 17. The destructiveness of omnipotence and
'perverted containing': Psychoanalytic reflections on the dynamic between
Donald Trump and his supporters 18. Notes toward a model for omnipotence
omnipotence 2. The thumb-in-the-mouth phantasy and the capacity to love 3.
Peter Pan, the omnipotent child In the adolescent . . . 4. Omnipotence in
adolescence 5. Customising the body: From omnipotence to autonomy In the
adult . . . 6. On three forms of thinking: Magical thinking, dream
thinking, and transformative thinking 7. The appeal of omnipotence 8. A
neuropsychoanalytic note on omnipotence 9. The relinquishment of
omnipotence in a severely traumatised patient 10. Possessed by a cruel God:
The damaging effect of an omnipotent internal object 11. From patients to
presidents: The Grand Illusion Why is omnipotence so difficult to give up?
12. Overcoming obstacles in analysis: Is it possible to relinquish
omnipotence and accept receptive femininity? 13. Omnipotence and the
difficulty in relinquishing it The desire for power in culture and society
. . . 14. Omnipotence and the paradoxes of insight: A Darwinian look 15.
Lear, Kane and the workings of omnipotence 16. Applying my theory of
psychosis to the Nazi phenomenon 17. The destructiveness of omnipotence and
'perverted containing': Psychoanalytic reflections on the dynamic between
Donald Trump and his supporters 18. Notes toward a model for omnipotence
Introduction In the beginning . . . 1. The survival function of primitive
omnipotence 2. The thumb-in-the-mouth phantasy and the capacity to love 3.
Peter Pan, the omnipotent child In the adolescent . . . 4. Omnipotence in
adolescence 5. Customising the body: From omnipotence to autonomy In the
adult . . . 6. On three forms of thinking: Magical thinking, dream
thinking, and transformative thinking 7. The appeal of omnipotence 8. A
neuropsychoanalytic note on omnipotence 9. The relinquishment of
omnipotence in a severely traumatised patient 10. Possessed by a cruel God:
The damaging effect of an omnipotent internal object 11. From patients to
presidents: The Grand Illusion Why is omnipotence so difficult to give up?
12. Overcoming obstacles in analysis: Is it possible to relinquish
omnipotence and accept receptive femininity? 13. Omnipotence and the
difficulty in relinquishing it The desire for power in culture and society
. . . 14. Omnipotence and the paradoxes of insight: A Darwinian look 15.
Lear, Kane and the workings of omnipotence 16. Applying my theory of
psychosis to the Nazi phenomenon 17. The destructiveness of omnipotence and
'perverted containing': Psychoanalytic reflections on the dynamic between
Donald Trump and his supporters 18. Notes toward a model for omnipotence
omnipotence 2. The thumb-in-the-mouth phantasy and the capacity to love 3.
Peter Pan, the omnipotent child In the adolescent . . . 4. Omnipotence in
adolescence 5. Customising the body: From omnipotence to autonomy In the
adult . . . 6. On three forms of thinking: Magical thinking, dream
thinking, and transformative thinking 7. The appeal of omnipotence 8. A
neuropsychoanalytic note on omnipotence 9. The relinquishment of
omnipotence in a severely traumatised patient 10. Possessed by a cruel God:
The damaging effect of an omnipotent internal object 11. From patients to
presidents: The Grand Illusion Why is omnipotence so difficult to give up?
12. Overcoming obstacles in analysis: Is it possible to relinquish
omnipotence and accept receptive femininity? 13. Omnipotence and the
difficulty in relinquishing it The desire for power in culture and society
. . . 14. Omnipotence and the paradoxes of insight: A Darwinian look 15.
Lear, Kane and the workings of omnipotence 16. Applying my theory of
psychosis to the Nazi phenomenon 17. The destructiveness of omnipotence and
'perverted containing': Psychoanalytic reflections on the dynamic between
Donald Trump and his supporters 18. Notes toward a model for omnipotence