The Clinical Application of the Theory of Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalysis - the one that we are familiar with - started in the clinical field. Freud and Breuer made some strides in the treatment of hysteria using hypnosis. They put together a theory of psychopathology based on two basic notions: conflicts between acceptable and unacceptable impulses (ideas, desires, fantasies, etc.), and the repression of the unacceptable impulses causing the formation of symptoms. Under hypnosis, the patients were given the chance to abreact the repressed, and the therapeutic endeavour was to allow catharsis, hence the origin of the term "catharsis theory" regarding this phase of hypnosis. However, the real breakthrough in psychoanalysis came to Freud in intuitions about matters from outside the field of pathology and the clinic, and without the help of hypnosis. They came from ordinary, even banal, phenomena like dreams, slips of the tongue, and jokes. In this book, the author covers the difference between a modified theory of catharsis and a theory of psychoanalysis, as well as the importance of psychodynamic diagnosis in the practice of psychoanalysis.
1105021700
The Clinical Application of the Theory of Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalysis - the one that we are familiar with - started in the clinical field. Freud and Breuer made some strides in the treatment of hysteria using hypnosis. They put together a theory of psychopathology based on two basic notions: conflicts between acceptable and unacceptable impulses (ideas, desires, fantasies, etc.), and the repression of the unacceptable impulses causing the formation of symptoms. Under hypnosis, the patients were given the chance to abreact the repressed, and the therapeutic endeavour was to allow catharsis, hence the origin of the term "catharsis theory" regarding this phase of hypnosis. However, the real breakthrough in psychoanalysis came to Freud in intuitions about matters from outside the field of pathology and the clinic, and without the help of hypnosis. They came from ordinary, even banal, phenomena like dreams, slips of the tongue, and jokes. In this book, the author covers the difference between a modified theory of catharsis and a theory of psychoanalysis, as well as the importance of psychodynamic diagnosis in the practice of psychoanalysis.
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The Clinical Application of the Theory of Psychoanalysis

The Clinical Application of the Theory of Psychoanalysis

by Ahmed Fayek
The Clinical Application of the Theory of Psychoanalysis

The Clinical Application of the Theory of Psychoanalysis

by Ahmed Fayek

eBook

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Overview

Psychoanalysis - the one that we are familiar with - started in the clinical field. Freud and Breuer made some strides in the treatment of hysteria using hypnosis. They put together a theory of psychopathology based on two basic notions: conflicts between acceptable and unacceptable impulses (ideas, desires, fantasies, etc.), and the repression of the unacceptable impulses causing the formation of symptoms. Under hypnosis, the patients were given the chance to abreact the repressed, and the therapeutic endeavour was to allow catharsis, hence the origin of the term "catharsis theory" regarding this phase of hypnosis. However, the real breakthrough in psychoanalysis came to Freud in intuitions about matters from outside the field of pathology and the clinic, and without the help of hypnosis. They came from ordinary, even banal, phenomena like dreams, slips of the tongue, and jokes. In this book, the author covers the difference between a modified theory of catharsis and a theory of psychoanalysis, as well as the importance of psychodynamic diagnosis in the practice of psychoanalysis.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780429920301
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 03/22/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 379 KB

About the Author

Ahmed Fayek

Table of Contents

PART I: PROBLEMATIQUES, CHAPTER ONE Problems of clinical practice: the myth of clinical theory, CHAPTER TWO Fundamentals of clinical practice: Freud’s clinical propositions, CHAPTER THREE The import of psychodiagnosis in clinical practice: identifying the core problems, CHAPTER FOUR Fixation and repetition-compulsion: psychical predictability and unpredictability, PART II: CLINICAL CHAPTER FIVE Analysis of a compulsive character: the import of diagnosis, CHAPTER SIX Analysis of a case of psychogenic amnesia: a glimpse of the traditional cases, CHAPTER SEVEN Analysis of an identity problem: the search for the core problem, CHAPTER EIGHT Analysis of a case of narcissistic disorder: the absent patient, PART III: THEORY CHAPTER NINE A theory to be rediscovered: future psychoanalysis

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