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Brief Introduction to Psychoanalytic Theory [Kietas viršelis]

4.28/5 (59 ratings by Goodreads)
(Birkbeck, University of London)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 272 pages, aukštis x plotis: 198x129 mm, weight: 327 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-May-2012
  • Leidėjas: Red Globe Press
  • ISBN-10: 0230369294
  • ISBN-13: 9780230369290
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 272 pages, aukštis x plotis: 198x129 mm, weight: 327 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-May-2012
  • Leidėjas: Red Globe Press
  • ISBN-10: 0230369294
  • ISBN-13: 9780230369290
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Psychoanalytic theory remains hugely influential to our understanding of the mind and human behaviour. It provides a rich source of ideas for therapeutic practice, while offering dramatic insights for the study of culture and society. This comprehensive review of the field: - Explores the birth of psychoanalysis, taking the reader step by step through Freud's original ideas and how they developed and evolved - Provides a clear account of fundamental psychoanalytic concepts - Discusses the different schools of psychoanalysis that have emerged since Freud - Illustrates the wider applications of psychoanalytic ideas across film, literature and politics

Written by a highly respected authority on psychoanalysis, this book is essential reading for trainees in counselling and psychotherapy, as well as for students across the arts, humanities and social sciences.

Recenzijos

'This most impressive book should be welcomed not only by all coming new to the detailed study of psychoanalysis but also by experienced clinicians and trainees from many psychotherapeutic approaches. Frosh, in just over 200 pages, covers a vast topic clearly and accessibly, drawing on a deep and wide-ranging scholarship.' - Therapy Today 'Extremely accessible and stunningly erudite. Frosh has an uncanny capacity to pick out the most important contributions in the history of psychoanalysis.' - Professor Peter Fonagy, Freud Memorial Professor of Psychoanalysis, University College London, UK 'An extraordinary book that more than lives up to its billing. It is set to become the standard textbook for the wide-ranging courses in psychoanalytic theory that are now taught throughout the Anglophone world.' - Sander Gilman, Professor of Psychiatry, Emory University, US 'So much has been written about psychoanalysis, it is difficult to produce something new, fresh and engaging - but Stephen Frosh has done just that.' - Judith Fewell, Honorary Fellow, Counselling and Psychotherapy, Edinburgh University, UK 'A highly readable introduction to a complex subject that will be of interest to all students of psychology and trainees in the 'talking therapies'. Frosh interrogates psychoanalysis with authority, offering not only the basics of the subject but a mature understanding based on years of experience.' - Ivan Ward, Deputy Director and Head of Learning, Freud Museum, UK

Daugiau informacijos

This most impressive book should be welcomed not only by all coming new to the detailed study of psychoanalysis but also by experienced clinicians and trainees from many psychotherapeutic approaches. Frosh, in just over 200 pages, covers a vast topic clearly and accessibly, drawing on a deep and wide-ranging scholarship.' - Therapy Today 'Extremely accessible and stunningly erudite. Frosh has an uncanny capacity to pick out the most important contributions in the history of psychoanalysis.' - Professor Peter Fonagy, Freud Memorial Professor of Psychoanalysis, University College London, UK 'An extraordinary book that more than lives up to its billing. It is set to become the standard textbook for the wide-ranging courses in psychoanalytic theory that are now taught throughout the Anglophone world.' - Sander Gilman, Professor of Psychiatry, Emory University, US 'So much has been written about psychoanalysis, it is difficult to produce something new, fresh and engaging - but Stephen Frosh has done just that.' - Judith Fewell, Honorary Fellow, Counselling and Psychotherapy, Edinburgh University, UK 'A highly readable introduction to a complex subject that will be of interest to all students of psychology and trainees in the 'talking therapies'. Frosh interrogates psychoanalysis with authority, offering not only the basics of the subject but a mature understanding based on years of experience.' - Ivan Ward, Deputy Director and Head of Learning, Freud Museum, UK
Acknowledgements ix
Part I Freudian theory
1(100)
1 The appeal of psychoanalysis
3(13)
Why psychoanalysis matters
3(3)
Psychoanalysts and others: a guide to terminology
6(1)
Variations in psychoanalysis
7(3)
Two core assumptions of psychoanalysts
10(1)
Precarious psychoanalysis
11(2)
Defending psychoanalytic values
13(2)
Summary
15(1)
2 A family history of psychoanalysis
16(12)
Psychoanalytic history as myth
16(3)
The unconscious of the psychoanalytic movement
19(3)
Schools of psychoanalysis
22(5)
Summary
27(1)
3 What Freud was trying to do
28(9)
Freud's ambition
28(1)
Psychoanalysis as science
29(2)
Explanations and causes
31(1)
The occult side of Freud
32(3)
Summary
35(2)
4 The Freudian unconscious
37(9)
Discovering the unconscious
37(1)
An obsessional case
38(2)
The nature of the unconscious
40(2)
Working with the unconscious
42(3)
Summary
45(1)
5 Sex, aggression, life and death
46(10)
What drives us on
46(1)
The sexual drive
47(2)
Components of the drive
49(2)
The other drive
51(1)
The death drive
52(3)
Summary
55(1)
6 Repression and other defences
56(12)
Protecting against threats
56(2)
Repression
58(2)
Primary and secondary repression
60(1)
When repression breaks down
61(2)
Other defence mechanisms
63(4)
Summary
67(1)
7 The structure of the mind: Id, ego, superego
68(9)
Models of the mind
68(2)
The system Ucs and its friends
70(2)
The ego and the id
72(2)
The superego
74(2)
Summary
76(1)
8 Oedipus, masculinity, femininity
77(12)
Why Oedipus?
77(1)
The Oedipus complex
78(4)
A psychosocial model?
82(1)
Feminine Oedipus
83(2)
Penis envy
85(1)
Responses to Oedipus
86(1)
Summary
87(2)
9 Psychopathology: What makes us sad (and mad)
89(12)
Psychoanalysis as psychotherapy
89(2)
What makes us worried, sad and mad
91(5)
Symptoms and defences
96(2)
Therapeutic work
98(2)
Summary
100(1)
Part II Developments in psychoanalytic theory
101
10 Psychoanalysts after Freud
103(14)
Post-Freudian schools of psychoanalysis
103(1)
Anna Freud
104(3)
Melanie Klein
107(2)
Donald Winnicott
109(3)
Jacques Lacan
112(3)
Summary
115(2)
11 Attachment and mentalization
117(11)
Biologically based psychoanalytic theory
117(1)
Attachment theory
118(2)
Attachment and psychoanalysis
120(3)
Mentalization
123(2)
Neuropsychoanalysis
125(2)
Summary
127(1)
12 The principles of object relations theory
128(12)
Objects and object relationships
128(3)
Some sources of object relations thinking
131(2)
Relational thinking
133(1)
Winnicott and the mother
134(2)
Subjectivity and intersubjectivily
136(2)
Summary
138(2)
13 Mourning, melancholia, depression and loss
140(10)
Mourning and melancholia
140(2)
Melancholia as social being
142(2)
The depressive position
144(3)
Reparation
147(1)
Depressive phenomena in the world
148(1)
Summary
149(1)
14 The paranoid-schizoid position and other extremes
150
Neurotic children, psychotic infants
150(2)
The paranoid-schizoid position
152(5)
Integrating the psyche
157(3)
Summary
160
STEPHEN FROSH Pro-Vice-Master and Professor of Psychology in the Department of Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck College, University of London, UK. He is the author of many books and papers on psychosocial studies and on psychoanalysis, including Hate and the 'Jewish Science': Anti-Semitism, Nazism and Psychoanalysis (Palgrave, 2005), For and Against Psychoanalysis (Routledge, 2006), After Words (Palgrave, 2002) and The Politics of Psychoanalysis (Palgrave, 1999). His most recent books are Psychoanalysis Outside the Clinic (Palgrave, 2010) and Feelings (Routledge, 2011).