Theorists of psychosis whose contributions are discussed in chapters 4, 5, 6, and 7 |
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ix | |
Preface |
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xi | |
Acknowledgments |
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xiii | |
Introduction |
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1 | (6) |
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PART I Not fully human: The unwitting collusion between medicine and psychoanalysis |
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7 | (16) |
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1 Not fully human: Psychiatric and psychoanalytic understandings of psychosis |
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9 | (6) |
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2 The medicalization of madness: Evolution of the equation of psychosis with degeneracy |
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15 | (8) |
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PART II Psychoanalytic models of psychosis |
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23 | (46) |
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3 Freud's attempt to treat psychosis as though it were neurosis |
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25 | (6) |
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Obsessive-compulsive thoughts or delusional/hallucinatory enactments? |
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26 | (2) |
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Freud's interpretive enactment of his theory of repressed unconscious and its results |
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28 | (3) |
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4 Freud's three models and their offspring I: The inability to relate |
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31 | (12) |
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5 Freud's three models and their offspring IIA: The inability to integrate mind and become neurotic: The European Kleinian iteration |
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43 | (7) |
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6 Freud's three models and their offspring IIB: The inability to be neurotic: the American ego psychology iteration of the integration model and Kernberg's transatlantic rapprochement |
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50 | (5) |
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7 Freud's three models and their offspring III: Thought disorder: the primary process |
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55 | (14) |
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PART III A new beginning: Distinguishing psychosis from neurosis |
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69 | (44) |
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Clinical preface to Chapters 8, 10, and 13 69 Jane |
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70 | (1) |
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71 | (4) |
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75 | (3) |
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78 | (3) |
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8 Two conscious mental processes: The role of primordial consciousness in psychosis and other human phenomena |
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81 | (14) |
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Misconceptions of psychosis as an adult onset disorder of genetic origin |
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81 | (2) |
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Characteristics of reflective representational thought |
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83 | (1) |
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Characteristics ofprimordial consciousness or first mind |
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84 | (3) |
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Clinical illustrations of primordial consciousness |
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87 | (4) |
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Dreaming and primordial consciousness |
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91 | (1) |
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Attachment and the commencement of psychic life |
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92 | (3) |
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9 Return to the Rat Man: Psychosis as a manifestation of primordial consciousness |
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95 | (2) |
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10 Psychosis as a disorder of attachment and separation-individuation |
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97 | (16) |
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Psychosis and pathology of separation: The stages of separation |
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97 | (2) |
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Relationship between schizophrenia and psychotic personality disorder: The false self |
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99 | (1) |
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Clinical illustrations of false self |
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99 | (2) |
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Good enough attachment and development of the two mental processes: Rank and Bowlby |
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101 | (4) |
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Pathology of attachment, maladaptive persistence of primordial consciousness, failure to separate, and development of psychosis |
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105 | (3) |
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Clinical illustrations of pathological attachment and failure to separate |
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108 | (5) |
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PART IV Treatment of psychosis |
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113 | (67) |
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11 The medical treatment of psychosis: Transforming psychosis from a socially disruptive to a socially adaptive disease |
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115 | (7) |
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12 Studies of the efficacy of psychological and psychoanalytic therapy of psychosis |
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122 | (4) |
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13 Psychoanalytic therapy of psychosis: Transforming primordial conscious mentation into reflective representational thought |
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126 | (11) |
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126 | (1) |
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The remembered and reconstructed past |
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127 | (1) |
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128 | (3) |
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Stages of therapy with schizophrenic persons and psychotic personalities |
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131 | (4) |
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Criteria of successful treatment and outcome |
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135 | (2) |
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14 Qualities of a psychoanalytic therapist of psychosis |
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137 | (5) |
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15 Patients write about their therapy |
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142 | (6) |
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16 The 11 year treatment of a chronic paranoid schizophrenic woman |
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148 | (26) |
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148 | (2) |
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150 | (4) |
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154 | (4) |
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158 | (3) |
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161 | (2) |
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163 | (2) |
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165 | (2) |
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167 | (1) |
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168 | (2) |
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170 | (2) |
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172 | (1) |
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173 | (1) |
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174 | (6) |
References |
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180 | (8) |
Index |
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188 | |