The Primitive Edge of ExperienceThis book is concerned with the primitive edge of human experience. It explores the idea that human experience is the product of the dialectical interplay of three modes of generating experience: the depressive, the paranoid-schizoid, and the autistic-contiguous. |
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The outcome of such a collapse may be a tyrannizing entrapment in rigid, asymbolic patternings of sensation (collapse in the direction of the autistic-contiguous mode); or imprisonment in a world of omnipotent internal objects wherein ...
The outcome of such a collapse may be a tyrannizing entrapment in rigid, asymbolic patternings of sensation (collapse in the direction of the autistic-contiguous mode); or imprisonment in a world of omnipotent internal objects wherein ...
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That is, for the boy, the mother is the object of both pre-Oedipal attachment to an omnipotent internal object and Oedipal desire for an external whole object. I view the psychological-interpersonal movement into triangulated Oedipal ...
That is, for the boy, the mother is the object of both pre-Oedipal attachment to an omnipotent internal object and Oedipal desire for an external whole object. I view the psychological-interpersonal movement into triangulated Oedipal ...
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... loving and hating feeling states, is the context for the development of the capacity for ambivalence. Historicity is created in the depressive mode as the individual relinquishes his or her reliance on omnipotent defenses. When, in.
... loving and hating feeling states, is the context for the development of the capacity for ambivalence. Historicity is created in the depressive mode as the individual relinquishes his or her reliance on omnipotent defenses. When, in.
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relinquishes his or her reliance on omnipotent defenses. When, in a paranoid-schizoid mode, one feels disappointed or angry at an object, the object is no longer experienced as the same object that it had been, but as a new object.
relinquishes his or her reliance on omnipotent defenses. When, in a paranoid-schizoid mode, one feels disappointed or angry at an object, the object is no longer experienced as the same object that it had been, but as a new object.
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... is experienced as a subject as well as an object, one acknowledges the life of the other outside the area of one's omnipotence. ... missing or mourning a lost object when absence can be undone through omnipotent thinking and denial.
... is experienced as a subject as well as an object, one acknowledges the life of the other outside the area of one's omnipotence. ... missing or mourning a lost object when absence can be undone through omnipotent thinking and denial.
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Contents
3 | |
The Nature of AutisticContiguous Anxiety | |
4 | |
Schizoid Phenomena | |
5 | |
The Transitional Relationship | |
A Reevaluation of the Freudian Female Oedipal Narrative | |
The Absence of Thirdness | |
7 | |
Creating Analytic Significance | |
Cautionary Tales | |
Anxious Questioning | |
8 | |
The Structuralization of Misrecognition | |
Misrecognition as a Dimension of Eating Disorders | |
Implications for the Development of Gender Identity | |
The Organization of Sexual Meaning | |
References | |
Index | |
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Common terms and phrases
analysand analysis analytic setting analytic space anxiety aspect attempt autistic shapes autistic-contiguous mode autistic-contiguous position become beginning bodily castration anxiety chapter Chasseguet-Smirgel child conception constitutes context countertransference created danger defense depressive mode depressive position described discussed early experienced external fantasy father-in-mother fear felt female Oedipus complex Freud girl’s idea initial internal object relations internal object relationship internal object world International Journal International Universities Press interpretation involves Jason Aronson Journal of Psycho-Analysis Klein little boy little girl male means mediated meeting misrecognitions mode of experience Oedipal father Ogden omnipotent one’s paranoid-schizoid mode paranoid-schizoid position pathological patient penis person phallic phallus phenomena pre-Oedipal mother primal scene phantasy primitive projective identification psychoanalytic psychological organization relatedness schizoid schizophrenic sensations sense sensory experience sensory surface sexual skin space symbol T. S. Eliot talk therapist therapy transference transitional Oedipal relationship transitional relationship Tustin unconscious mind understanding understood Winnicott York