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This fascinating book offers an in-depth exploration of the gradual development of the concept of identification as it has evolved in the Freudian tradition of psychoanalysis.
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This fascinating book offers an in-depth exploration of the gradual development of the concept of identification as it has evolved in the Freudian tradition of psychoanalysis.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 234
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. April 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 386g
- ISBN-13: 9780367354855
- ISBN-10: 0367354853
- Artikelnr.: 60797819
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 234
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. April 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 386g
- ISBN-13: 9780367354855
- ISBN-10: 0367354853
- Artikelnr.: 60797819
Jean Florence is a psychothérapies based in Belgium. As a professor at the UCL between 1973 and 2007, he taught psychology, the psychology of dramatic art, and clinical psychology and psychoanalysis and became Professor Emeritus in 2007. He was President of the Belgian School of Psychoanalysis from 1982 to 1990 and from 1993 to 1997.
Introduction; Foreword: symptoms, transferences, identifications; Exergue;
I. Identification and symptom formation 1. Identification: the first
references 2. Hysterical identification A. The dream of the "witty
butcher's wife" B. Dream and hysteria: the Dora case 3. Identification in
dream-work 4. Identification and the comic A. From dream to witticism B.
The species of the comic or the play of comparisons C. Comical illusion;
II. Identification and narcissism 1. Identification, orality and
object-choice A. A geneaology of identification B. The work of puberty C.
The two methods of choosing a sexual object 2. "Totemic" identification A.
Identification and projection: magic as a model B. Totemism and the father
complex C. Identification theory and practice 3. Narcissistic
identification A. The fate of the lost object: mourning or melancholia B.
Supplemental note to Mourning and Melancholia: Karl Abraham C.
Identification and metapsychology; III. The Oedipus complex and the
"institutions" of the ego 1. Identification and repetition compulsion A.
Memory and mastery: the double game of Fort-Da 2. Love and identification:
the function of the ideal A. The singular and the plural B. Identifications
C. The ego and the ego ideal 3. Genesis and structure of formations of the
ego: ego and ego ideal - the superego A. Oedipal identifications B. Remarks
on the ideal agency C. The work of the ego, between life instinct and death
instinct; In conclusion 1. Concluding an itinerary A. Freud I: dream,
hysteria and jokes B. Freud II: narcissism C. Freud III: the death instinct
and the second topographical model 2. Elements of a metapsychology of
identification A. Identification models B. Economy of identification C.
Dynamics of identification
I. Identification and symptom formation 1. Identification: the first
references 2. Hysterical identification A. The dream of the "witty
butcher's wife" B. Dream and hysteria: the Dora case 3. Identification in
dream-work 4. Identification and the comic A. From dream to witticism B.
The species of the comic or the play of comparisons C. Comical illusion;
II. Identification and narcissism 1. Identification, orality and
object-choice A. A geneaology of identification B. The work of puberty C.
The two methods of choosing a sexual object 2. "Totemic" identification A.
Identification and projection: magic as a model B. Totemism and the father
complex C. Identification theory and practice 3. Narcissistic
identification A. The fate of the lost object: mourning or melancholia B.
Supplemental note to Mourning and Melancholia: Karl Abraham C.
Identification and metapsychology; III. The Oedipus complex and the
"institutions" of the ego 1. Identification and repetition compulsion A.
Memory and mastery: the double game of Fort-Da 2. Love and identification:
the function of the ideal A. The singular and the plural B. Identifications
C. The ego and the ego ideal 3. Genesis and structure of formations of the
ego: ego and ego ideal - the superego A. Oedipal identifications B. Remarks
on the ideal agency C. The work of the ego, between life instinct and death
instinct; In conclusion 1. Concluding an itinerary A. Freud I: dream,
hysteria and jokes B. Freud II: narcissism C. Freud III: the death instinct
and the second topographical model 2. Elements of a metapsychology of
identification A. Identification models B. Economy of identification C.
Dynamics of identification
Introduction; Foreword: symptoms, transferences, identifications; Exergue;
I. Identification and symptom formation 1. Identification: the first
references 2. Hysterical identification A. The dream of the "witty
butcher's wife" B. Dream and hysteria: the Dora case 3. Identification in
dream-work 4. Identification and the comic A. From dream to witticism B.
The species of the comic or the play of comparisons C. Comical illusion;
II. Identification and narcissism 1. Identification, orality and
object-choice A. A geneaology of identification B. The work of puberty C.
The two methods of choosing a sexual object 2. "Totemic" identification A.
Identification and projection: magic as a model B. Totemism and the father
complex C. Identification theory and practice 3. Narcissistic
identification A. The fate of the lost object: mourning or melancholia B.
Supplemental note to Mourning and Melancholia: Karl Abraham C.
Identification and metapsychology; III. The Oedipus complex and the
"institutions" of the ego 1. Identification and repetition compulsion A.
Memory and mastery: the double game of Fort-Da 2. Love and identification:
the function of the ideal A. The singular and the plural B. Identifications
C. The ego and the ego ideal 3. Genesis and structure of formations of the
ego: ego and ego ideal - the superego A. Oedipal identifications B. Remarks
on the ideal agency C. The work of the ego, between life instinct and death
instinct; In conclusion 1. Concluding an itinerary A. Freud I: dream,
hysteria and jokes B. Freud II: narcissism C. Freud III: the death instinct
and the second topographical model 2. Elements of a metapsychology of
identification A. Identification models B. Economy of identification C.
Dynamics of identification
I. Identification and symptom formation 1. Identification: the first
references 2. Hysterical identification A. The dream of the "witty
butcher's wife" B. Dream and hysteria: the Dora case 3. Identification in
dream-work 4. Identification and the comic A. From dream to witticism B.
The species of the comic or the play of comparisons C. Comical illusion;
II. Identification and narcissism 1. Identification, orality and
object-choice A. A geneaology of identification B. The work of puberty C.
The two methods of choosing a sexual object 2. "Totemic" identification A.
Identification and projection: magic as a model B. Totemism and the father
complex C. Identification theory and practice 3. Narcissistic
identification A. The fate of the lost object: mourning or melancholia B.
Supplemental note to Mourning and Melancholia: Karl Abraham C.
Identification and metapsychology; III. The Oedipus complex and the
"institutions" of the ego 1. Identification and repetition compulsion A.
Memory and mastery: the double game of Fort-Da 2. Love and identification:
the function of the ideal A. The singular and the plural B. Identifications
C. The ego and the ego ideal 3. Genesis and structure of formations of the
ego: ego and ego ideal - the superego A. Oedipal identifications B. Remarks
on the ideal agency C. The work of the ego, between life instinct and death
instinct; In conclusion 1. Concluding an itinerary A. Freud I: dream,
hysteria and jokes B. Freud II: narcissism C. Freud III: the death instinct
and the second topographical model 2. Elements of a metapsychology of
identification A. Identification models B. Economy of identification C.
Dynamics of identification