E-Book, Englisch, 256 Seiten
Rubovits-Seitz Kohut's Freudian Vision
Erscheinungsjahr 2016
ISBN: 978-1-317-71372-2
Verlag: CRC Press
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
E-Book, Englisch, 256 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-317-71372-2
Verlag: CRC Press
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Heinz Kohut was arguably the most influential modern day psychoanalyst. Because current interest in Kohut's work has focused so completely on self psychology, however, certain aspects of Kohut's thinking, in particular his nonreductive synthesis of Freudian theory, are in danger of being lost.
Prior to his development of self psychology, Kohut was a legendary teacher of Freudian theory at the Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis. In this volume, Philip Rubovits-Seitz presents Kohut's previously unavailable lectures from his course on psychoanalytic psychology (prepared in collaboration with Kohut himself) along with an illuminating summary statement on Freudian theory jointly written by Kohut and Rubovits-Seitz.
Rubovits-Seitz continues with his own insightful analysis of Kohut's distinctive approach to Freudian theory. And he concludes by arguing persuasively why Kohut's later contributions should best be viewed as a continuation, rather than an abandonment, of this early vision. Kohut's Freudian Vision not only repairs an outstanding tear in received psychoanalytic history but also challenges self psychologists and contemporary Freudian psychoanalysts alike to renewed reflection.
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Introduction
I. Kohut's Lectures on Psychoanalytic Psychology (1958-1960) - Heinz Kohut and Philip F.D. Seitz
1. Three Periods in the Development of Psychoanalysis
2. How It All Began
3. The Dynamic and Topographic Points of View
4. Conflict, Transference, and Infantile Sexuality
5.Optimal versus Traumatic Frustration, Memory versus Hallucinations, and Daydreaming
6. Psychic Trauma and the Economic Point of View
7. Primal Repression and "Actual Neurosis"
8. The Genetic Point of View
9. Symptom Formation
10. Symptom Formation From a Longitudinal Perspective
11. Freud's Theory of Psychosis
12. Freud's Theory of Depression and Preoedipal Phobias
13. Chapter 7 in The Interpretation of Dreams
14. Chapter 7, Section A: The Forgetting of Dreams
15. Chapter 7, Section B: Regression
16. Chapter 7, Section B: Regression (continued)
17. Chapter 7, Section C: Wish-Fulfillment
18. Chapter 7, Section C: Wish-Fulfillment (continued)
19. Chapter 7, Section D: The Function of Dreams
20. Chapter 7, Section D: The Function of Dreams (continued)
21. Chapter 7, Section E: Primary and Secondary Process
22. Chapter 7, Section F: The Unconscious, Consciousness, and Reality
23. The Second Phase in the Development of Psychoanalytic Theory
24. Melancholia
25. The Structural Model and Neutralization
26. Aggression
27. Aggression (continued): The "Childhood Object" and the Superego
28. The Ego Ideal: Censuring and Approving Parts of the Superego
29. Narcissism
30. The Dual Instinct Theory
31. Changes in the Concept of Anxiety
32. Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety: Chapters 1 and 2
33. Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety: Chapters 3 and 4
34. Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety: Chapter 5
II. Concepts and Theories of Psychoanalysis (1963) - Heinz Kohut and Philip F.D. Seitz
III. Kohut's Method of Synthesizing Freudian Theory - Philip F.D. Rubovits-Seitz
IV. Kohut's Concepts of Narcissism and Self Psychology: Continuities with Freudian Theory - Philip F.D. Rubovits-Seitz