Additionally, the idea that psychoanalytic theories of spectatorship do not generate researchable questions should be rejected. |
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The author offers blend of psychoanalytic research, quick-and-dirty philosophy, and common sense. |
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I also wonder whether there is a term in psychoanalytic theory for this perception of our body's radical alterity. |
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The ambivalence stems from Wittgenstein's admiration of Freud combined with his staunch condemnation of psychoanalytic theory. |
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As such, expression in psychoanalytic theory always registers the subject's lack, incompleteness, or status as split. |
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There are different theories related to sexual masochism, many stemming from the psychoanalytic camp. |
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One might as well tell the patient she is possessed by demons, as give her a psychoanalytic explanation of her physical disease or disorder. |
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The Oedipus complex is the psychoanalytic term everyone knows, and the ideas behind it were first mooted in 1899's The Interpretation of Dreams. |
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Modern psychoanalytic practice goes to great lengths to quarantine the psychoanalytic conversation from the real world. |
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The present study examined the psychoanalytic perspective regarding mate selection. |
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Recall the exaggerated influence vouchsafed, not too long ago, to psychoanalytic theory. |
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A psychoanalytic reading suggests that horror movies play on our individual nightmares, and specifically our fear of death and dissolution. |
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The researchers have shown the value of a psychoanalytic approach based in day hospitals for patients with severe personality disorder. |
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The psychoanalytic concept of displacement has also been forwarded as a plausible explanation. |
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But it is ordinary reciprocity that good psychoanalytic practice must, axiomatically, bar from the relationship of analyst and patient. |
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Most personality disorder treatments today include all the myths of childhood inherited from psychoanalytic models of development. |
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In psychoanalytic terms, this is the process whereby the subject's phenomenology may be transferred to the researcher. |
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The interwar years saw the development and spread of the concepts and assumptions of depth psychology, particularly of psychoanalytic thought. |
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Lock starts the chapter with an interesting historical review of the emergence of the female climacteric or menopause in medical and psychoanalytic discourse. |
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In the early sixties, he moved to the USA, where he received his psychoanalytic training. |
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In the exhibition, Gradiva reflects the development of Freud's psychoanalytic research. |
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For example, Freud analysed his own daughter Anna over a period of several years, a flagrant violation of psychoanalytic principles which most psychoanalysts would condemn. |
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According to the psychoanalytic model of the self, there are thoughts we keep to ourselves, thoughts we keep from ourselves and thoughts we don't even know we have. |
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Two decades of psychoanalytic film theory have shown us how to read these films as the working out of a particularly ambiguous oedipal fantasy, centred on the woman. |
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In short, Lacanian psychoanalytic theory can help rhetoricians navigate the posthumanist theoretical landscape in a characteristically rhetorical way. |
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In deconstructive and psychoanalytic readings in particular, this allegedly pure and self-referential language returns to haunt the text's unity, coherence, and independence. |
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At one time psychiatrists held a monopoly on psychoanalytic practice, but soon nonmedical therapists also were admitted. |
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During the nineteen-fifties, Silvio Fanti tried to overcome certain deficiencies of the classic psychoanalytic method. |
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Valerie was Clinical Coordinator and emphasized the centrality of psychoanalytic theory to understanding morbid obesity. |
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When looking at the body of psychoanalytic literature dealing with perversions it becomes evident that today there is clearly fading support of the theory of phallic primacy. |
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Under the existing legislation, certain supplies of psychoanalytic services are exempt. |
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The problem is the psychoanalytic reaction that this idea produces, as this is an attack on culture. |
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It was the Greek philosopher Aristotle who gave us a near approach to a psychoanalytic theory of play. |
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In this regard several essays published in 1987 clearly mark a turning point, not to mention the insouciant crashing of psychoanalytic theory on the Black Studies scene. |
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Autognosis is not really different from the process which is commonly recognised as being responsible for the curative efficiency of psychoanalytic treatment. |
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Answers to such questions have been sought from psychoanalytic theories, from social learning theories, and from various behavioristic approaches to psychology. |
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Most psychoanalysts recognize this principle as valid, more especially since analysis of transference became so central a concern of psychoanalytic treatment. |
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This idea is what R. Storolow describes as intersubjective system in the analytic context, but we point out the evolutionary and therapeutic shift from interdependency to intersubjectivity during the psychoanalytic process. |
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Even after all of the research and writing, I find fresh nuances in religions, psychoanalytic theories, linguistics, economics, philosophy, plant research, soil chemistry, and the metalanguages of pheromones. |
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The therapist as a 'bad object': the use of countertransference enactment to facilitate psychoanalytic therapy, chapter 10, by Webster, suggests that therapeutic enactments may facilitate therapy and prevent trauma. |
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First of all we changed our name to reflect a more inclusive membership of practitioners and theoreticians who did not necessarily identify themselves as psychoanalytic but rather as generically psychodynamic in orientation. |
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It is also a goal to see the inclusion of psychoanalytic and psychodynamic treatment orientations among those reviewed and proposed for clinical conditions in CPA Fact Sheets. |
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Here we see an instance of the thoroughly Wordsworthian character of much psychoanalytic theory. |
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Feminist and psychoanalytic critics were largely responsible for the recovery from neglect of Shelley as a writer. |
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There are intense debates in the psychoanalytic literature as to whether the primary form of infantile desire is allosexual or auto-erotic. |
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Some students of social movements, particularly those whose analysis has a psychoanalytic orientation, have suggested that the fanaticism of dedicated members results from individual psychopathological states. |
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In the theoretical sphere, he is best known for structuralist and psychoanalytic approaches to the analysis of folklore. |
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You won't be surprised, however, to hear me say that it is written in a very different frame of reference than the psychoanalytic view. |
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There is a tension in Blasing's study between her psychohistorical account of language acquisition and mainstream psychoanalytic theory. |
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The concept of the Ego, having arisen from the psychoanalytic cults, and firmly embedded into the total field of experience, serves to maintain the mind-body seperation which is so fixed in our experience. |
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Since most Canadian psychologists and students are oblivious to how psychoanalytic thought has evolved since the time of Freud, this should be an educative corrective. |
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They develop a metapsychological understanding of art while raising doubts about the self-serving nature of psychoanalytic aesthetics. |
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Because psychoanalytic psychologists are largely practitioners and not academics, we have to use our own funds to go to conferences rather than getting it paid for from a university or other funding institution. |
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In the course of these researches, he has clearly seen that psychoanalytic views have equally a religious and a criteriologic signification. |
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In contrast, nothing could, even in principle, falsify psychoanalytic theories. |
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He thus came to the conclusion that psychoanalytic theories had more in common with primitive myths than with genuine science. |
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This suggestion would find an important point of rapprochment between the structuralist and psychoanalytic approaches to myth in Freud's thought. |
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Like works of literature which introduce us to characters with increasing complexity and depth, the psychoanalytic endeavour involves the analyst and analysand in a quest to understand a multi-layered inner world. |
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The long term goal is to come up with process oriented, essentially psychoanalytic criteria for the indication of psychoanalyses in different settings. |
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As with her previous biographies, The Lambs brought a mixed response from critics, many of whom objected to her unscholarly approach to biography and her unprofessional application of psychoanalytic theory. |
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With Melanie Klein, his mentor, he pioneered the psychoanalytic school of object-relations theory, which by now has largely supplanted orthodox Freudianism as a way to understand a child's earliest experiences of selfhood. |
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Psychotherapy Lives Intersecting recounts the experiences of numerous patients he worked with over close to fifty years as a psychoanalytic psychotherapist. |
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Holland applied psychoanalytic literary criticism to the play. |
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On the other hand, Jonson received less attention from the new critics than did some other playwrights and his work was not of programmatic interest to psychoanalytic critics. |
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Interestingly, findings from neuro-imaging studies have led to a contemporary psychobiologic understanding of dreams that conforms to psychoanalytic theory. |
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Freud initiated the psychoanalytic critique of Surrealism with his remark that what interested him most about the Surrealists was not their unconscious but their conscious. |
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Some feminist psychoanalytic critics, such as Janet Adelman, have connected the play's treatment of gender roles to its larger theme of inverted natural order. |
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Her query was either self-deconstructing or opaquely psychoanalytic. |
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