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El. knyga: Freud's Models of the Mind: An Introduction

Edited by , Edited by (in private practice, Frankfurt, Germany), Edited by (Emeritus Professor of Psychoanalysis, University of College London, UK, and Winner of the 1995 Sigourney Award), Edited by
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The authors succeed in putting Freud's models of the mind into a historical and developmental framework and show the complexity of his thinking on the relationship between the conscious and unconscious mind.

Recenzijos

'There are, of course, many ways of trying to make sense of Freud's models of the mind. [ The authors] are quite aware of the difficulties and risks involved in presenting and schematising Freud's complexity of thinking and the polyphonic nuances of his attempts to map the relationship between out conscious and unconscious life. With a great sense of modest,y but also with a refreshing honesty and timely awareness of current debates in other fields of historical research, the authors stress the inevitable distortions inherent in any attempt to reconstruct historically even Freud's thinking. Yet they have succeeded admirably in their task, led by Sandler's well-known clarity of mind and talmudic subtlety in analysing and defining the meaning of Freud's concepts and general ideas, observing their transformation, and putting them into a historical, developmental, but not mechanical frame. This book is a must for everybody, regardless of what school or trend of psychoanalysis they belong to, for it enables us to understand how even contemporary psychoanalysis is still creatively rooted in the work of its founders.'- Riccardo Steiner'The authors have held firm to their original intent to present the structure of Freud's own work and thought as systematically as possible, given all the twists and even contradictions in Freud's developmental progression. This can serves as a conceptual springboard for both neophyte and seasoned analyst better to navigate our burgeoning literature, keeping in mind the transformed derivations from and elaborations upon Freud, as well as the clear departures from - and even repudiations of - other tenets of his overall body of work.'- Robert S. Wallerstein

Preface xi
Foreword xiii
Robert S. Wallerstein
Introduction 1(10)
I FOUNDATIONS
The development of Freud's theory
11(19)
Basic assumptions
30(11)
II FIRST PHASE: THE AFFECT--TRAUMA FRAME OF REFERENCE
The affect--trauma model
41(16)
III SECOND PHASE: THE TOPOGRAPHICAL FRAME OF REFERENCE
The organization of the mental apparatus
57(15)
The system Unconscious
72(10)
The system Preconscious
82(14)
The system Conscious
96(5)
Transference
101(15)
Dream processes
116(25)
IV FURTHER ASPECTS
Narcissism and object-love
141(12)
Limitations and transition to the structural model
153(12)
V THIRD PHASE: THE STRUCTURAL FRAME OF REFERENCE
Characteristics
165(7)
The three agencies
172(13)
A final word 185(2)
References 187(6)
Index 193
Christopher Dare received his psychoanalytic training in London, and for twenty years combined private practice in psychoanalysis with a Consultant post in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at the Bethlem and Maudsley Hospitals, London. He also holds an academic position at the Institute of Psychiatry, University of London, developing research into psychotherapy. Anna Ursula Dreher trained as a psychoanalyst in the German Psychoanalytic Association. After working at the Social Psychological Research Centre of the University of Saarbrucken, she spent six years at the Sigmund Freud Institute, Frankfurt, and was involved in research on psychoanalytic concepts. She is now in private practice in Frankfurt, and lectures in psychoanalysis and psychology at the universities of Hanover and Giessen. Alex Holder trained in London at the Anna Freud Center and the British Psychoanalytical Society. He is a member of the German Psychoanalytical Association and heads the Department for Analytic Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy at the Michael Balint Institute in Hamburg. He is also the Editor of the 'Bulletin of the European Psychoanalytical Federation'. Joseph Sandler qualified as a psychoanalyst in the British Psychoanalytical Society. He was the Freud Memorial Professor of Psychoanalysis in the University of London and Director of the Psychoanalysis Unit at University College London, and in private practice in London. He was formerly the first Sigmund Freud Professor of Psychoanalysis at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Editor of the 'International Journal of Psychoanalysis' and the 'International Review of Psychoanalysis', and was President of the International Psychoanalytical Association.