Freud and the PassionsJohn O'Neill Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996 - 236 Seiten John O'Neill explores the human passions as both the object of psychoanalysis and the creative principle of Freud's own discovery and practice of psychoanalysis. Love, hate, anger, jealousy, envy, knowledge, and ignorance: the passions dominate infancy, adolescence, and adulthood, marking them with narcissism, murder, seduction, and self-destruction. They are both the soul's theater and the soul of theater, art, literature, and music. If fear, hate, envy, and jealousy rival love, beauty, and knowledge, or turn into one another, they just as surely expand the human heart. The original essays in this volume analyze the human passions in Freud's metapsychology, from the case histories of Dora, Rat Man, and Schreber to his studies of Leonardo da Vinci, Gradiva, and the "Case of Homosexuality in a Woman." Other essays are devoted to Macbeth, the Judgment of Solomon, Virginia Woolf, and Freud's own adolescence. In constructing a genealogy of the passions from early to late modernity, these studies show the subtle interaction of psychic and social conflict, of ambivalence and disavowal in the workings of the human soul. Contributors are John O'Neill, William Kerrigan, Donald L. Carveth, Jerome Neu, Kathleen Woodward, Claire Kahane, Mary Jacobus, John Forrester, Ellie Ragland, Geoff Miles, and Laurence A. Rickels. |
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... analysand to rework childhood identifications because the analyst is taken as a parental figure . I shall conclude this essay by suggesting that Freud's particular passion - his ignorance of the cause of Dora's hysteria - blinded him to ...
... analysand's ignorance will not appear in analysis through understanding ; only through the analyst's refusal to understand . In this sense , Lacan's use of the cut to punctuate the analytic session is crucial to the functioning of ...
... analysand , we can see Freud as blinded by imaginarizing the transference with Dora . We can see how , by following Freud in his own terms , analysis has stayed on the wrong foot ever since , whether anchoring itself in drive theory ...
Inhalt
Psychoanalytic Conceptions of | 25 |
On Hating the Ones | 53 |
From Freud | 73 |
Urheberrecht | |
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