• Professor Crawford is the co-editor of New Thoughts on the Black Arts Movement (2006, Rutgers University Press) and author of Dilution Anxiety and the Black Phallus (2008, Ohio State University Press). (cornell.edu)
  • A man who pleads for castration and amputation of his penis may arouse, on an unconscious level, significant anxiety in male psychiatrists. (health.am)
  • Nasio makes the provocative claim that the entirety of the psychoanalytical corpus, all of its concepts, including repression, sublimation, the theory of the drives, desire, as well as the phantasm of the phallus and castration anxiety, revolves around the idea that the child desires the parents. (sunypress.edu)
  • A complementary theory to castration anxiety is separation anxiety which is suffered and defended against in childhood. (artbrain.org)
  • he understands its fundamental function is still to alleviate castration anxiety. (artbrain.org)
  • In a corollary, fear of the father's rage, in retaliation for oedipal desires, leads a boy to escape castration anxiety by withdrawing from women and thus competition with the father. (priory.com)
  • Anna Freud (1952) pointed out that operations on the genitals, such as circumcision, would cause "castration anxiety. (drmomma.org)
  • Cansever also observed various anxieties, including castration anxiety. (drmomma.org)
  • In modern psychoanalytic theory, castration anxiety is not about losing one's penis. (metafilter.com)
  • Therein lies the castration anxiety. (metafilter.com)
  • If the Western and the crime film worked well as open forums for the debate about our values and our history during the years of the Vietnam war, the horror and science fiction film poignantly expresses the sense of powerlessness and anxiety that correlates with times of Whereas the Western and recession, Cold War strife, galloping inflation, and national confusion. (atmostfear-entertainment.com)
  • Crawford adds images of skin color dilution as a type of castration to the field of race and psychoanalysis. (cornell.edu)
  • James W. Anderson is the Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Northwestern University, past President of the Chicago Psychoanalytic Society and Editor of the Annual of Psychoanalysis . (psychohistory.us)
  • Defying contemporary claims of an alleged 'death of psychoanalysis,' and in contrast with recent attempts to minimize the relevance of Oedipus for the psyche, Nasio approaches Oedipus as a legend that helps to make sense of the origins of sexual identity and neurotic suffering. (sunypress.edu)
  • Although that's true, some books on psychoanalysis, especially by certain authors, might be a bit complicated at the beginning for anyone who isn't familiar with the territory. (exploringyourmind.com)
  • There are a lot of different authors in the arena of humanist psychoanalysis. (exploringyourmind.com)
  • His latest book on the subject of the psychoanalysis of autism is called The Autistic Subject: On the Threshold of Language, where he presents a novel account of autistic subjectivity from a Lacanian psychoanalytic perspective. (lacan.org.nz)
  • Secondly, I am approaching the horror science fiction film regarding a psychoanalytic framework, though I do not believe that psychoanalysis is a hermeneutic method that can be applied unproblematically to any kind of film or work of art. (atmostfear-entertainment.com)
  • Their many books include translations of Nasio's Five Lessons on the Psychoanalytic Theory of Jacques Lacan and The Book of Love and Pain: Thinking at the Limit with Freud and Lacan , both also published by SUNY Press. (sunypress.edu)
  • It was the step that came before the basic psychoanalytic technique called free association (invented by Freud). (exploringyourmind.com)
  • Her article, which was influenced by the theories of Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan , is one of the first major essays that helped shift the orientation of film theory towards a psychoanalytic framework . (wikipedia.org)
  • Children, their parents, the structure of the family in which they grow, the problems that bring them to psychoanalytic treatment today in different parts of the world appear not to be the same as those encountered by Freud and by the pioneers of the psychoanalytic work with children: Hermine Hug-Hellmuth, Anna Freud and Melanie Klein. (lacan.org.nz)
  • Psychoanalytic theory often refers to one's "highly prized sexual organs" (Brenner 1974) and the cathexis of libidinal energy. (health.am)
  • Ego integrity versus despair: This occurs in late adulthood and is characterized by acceptance of one's life and a sense of peace and fulfillment. (kollec.life)
  • Taylor's remarkable book helps to elucidate the wedding of attraction and repulsion in Bellmer's work by drawing on psychoanalytic theory, while questioning the artist's own psychoanalytically informed interpretation of his art. (blogspot.com)
  • As the artist's own declarations reveal, using psychoanalytic theory to interpret him is intricate. (blogspot.com)
  • Perhaps in response, psychoanalytic thought seems to have erected its last line of defence in the quasi-scientific domain of art and literary theory, fields which seldom demand rigorous concrete or logical proof. (blogspot.com)
  • Freud's theory of psychoanalytic development is based on the idea that human behavior is driven by unconscious desires and conflicts. (kollec.life)
  • These links between biography and theory gave rise to a movement of conceptualisation making it possible to develop a psychoanalytic metapsychology of adolescence: indeed, emerged such notions as asceticism, intellectualisation in relationship with anorexia and the struggle against the genitalisation of the adolescent body. (symbiosisonlinepublishing.com)
  • It is justified in the fertility of this relation for the psychoanalytic theory and for the clinical practice. (ndltd.org)
  • To develop these considerations, a bibliographical research through the authors of the psychoanalytic theory who discuss on this subject, as well as the analysis of fragments of clinical cases taken care by the researcher in the scope of an institution of internment for adolescents in conflict with the law in the city of Goiânia. (ndltd.org)
  • Not surprisingly, the first collection of edited work, Kai-Yu Hsu and Helen Palubinskas's Asian-American Authors (1972), contains references to only three ethnic groups within Asian American literature: Chinese, Filipino, and Japanese American. (indexarticles.com)
  • Following two miscarriages and the possible loss of her marriage, Seriema travels to Paris in 1972 to undergo psychoanalytic treatment with the maverick French analyst, Jacques Lacan. (lacan.org.nz)
  • The place here refers to the context, specifically the refusal of the psychoanalytic authorities to grant Lacan and his followers affiliation - and by extension the authority to train analysts - an 'excommunication' to which Lacan reacted by forming his own school in the mid-sixties. (lacanonline.com)
  • It evidences that the structure of the perverse one will be marked by the refusal of the castration and the challenge to the laws that conduct the Oedipus complex. (ndltd.org)
  • It concluded that it has a specific dimension of pleasure in the perversion with different manifestations found in the exhibitionism, the voyeurism, the sadism and the masochism, however guided in a common nucleus that is the refusal of castration, the sexual difference and the challenge of law. (ndltd.org)
  • Based on clinical experience and not only on conceptual categories, our psychoanalytic view of the sufferings and achievements of today's children and adolescents differs significantly from other contemporary perspectives, with which we maintain a dialogue, as there is much to learn from the practices and research of people who in different capacities devote themselves seriously to the lives of young human beings. (lacan.org.nz)
  • Meanwhile, Le Gaufey had published a book entitled The Pastout of Lacan: Logical Consistency, Clinical Consequences [1] which the author modestly called ' un instrument de travail ' which contained the article on sexuation with numerous modifications, without however changing the general profile of the text which had originally appeared in the journal L'Unebévue[ 2] from which I had worked. (theletter.ie)
  • 1 ' In what sense these tales were caused by nightmares or modeled on dreams is less important than the fact that the nightmare is a culturally established framework for presenting and understanding the horror genre. (atmostfear-entertainment.com)
  • After noting that she does « not consider the attribution [of the poem's authorship] to Ovid a settled issue », Gordon explains that she refers to the author as « Ovid », in quotes, « for convenience. (openedition.org)
  • Castration here could very well relate to the genital phase of Freudian infantile sexuality with the development of sensory perception that helps the child differentiate between biological sex organs. (hinducollegegazette.com)
  • [3] Prior to Mulvey, film theorists such as Jean-Louis Baudry and Christian Metz used psychoanalytic ideas in their theoretical accounts of the cinema. (wikipedia.org)
  • As in the psychoanalytic context of storytelling , the listener is placed in a transferential relation to the narrative. (upenn.edu)
  • He abandoned the one-on-one psychoanalytic practice and created tools for analysing small groups, namely group therapy. (newiseverything.com)
  • Psychotherapy of Psychoanalytic Orientation (BPPO), reflecting on its application in online psychotherapy. (bvsalud.org)
  • While your clothing may not be appropriate for the situation, your contribution to such basic decisions affects your sense of independence. (kollec.life)
  • The issues posed by such a narrative structure may most of all concern relation, or how narrative relation relates to intersubjective relation, and the relation of relation, in both these senses, to language as the medium of telling and listening, as the medium of transmission, transaction, and transference. (upenn.edu)
  • Based on her play "Goodbye, Doctor" and her novel "Lacan's Parrot," in which Milan recounts her analytic work, ADIEU LACAN offers an insightful and accurate account of an actual psychoanalytic cure. (lacan.org.nz)
  • Academe distrusted a genre that ignored the "death of the author," structuralism, and deconstruction, which blurred and muddled T.S. Eliot's powerfully influential separation between the work and the personality of the author, and relied heavily on the conventions and traditions of the nineteenth-century realist novel. (nybooks.com)
  • She quotes one of Donald Kuspit's alternative, post-Freudian yet still psychoanalytic definitions in her discussion of fetishism. (blogspot.com)
  • It is understood that the fetishism, as monument to the castration, also is part of this play and its creation is accomplished for the process of split of the ego. (ndltd.org)
  • His latest book is The Impossible Revolution: Making Sense of the Syrian Tragedy . (yassinhs.com)
  • In the text of the two Alice books, author Lewis Carroll often did not remark on the physical appearance of his protagonist. (wikipedia.org)
  • One of her recent authored books is Psychological Roots of the Climate Crisis: Neoliberal Exceptionalism and the Culture of Uncare . (psychohistory.us)
  • Join the SUNY Press email list for the latest information on our books and authors, including new releases, events, and special offers. (sunypress.edu)
  • In doing so, we have restricted our study mainly to full-length texts such as edited collections and single-authored literary critical books. (indexarticles.com)
  • The nodal point for the masquerade stems from 'castration' and the development of ego from the mirror stage, which lets go of some narcissistic authority for the child. (hinducollegegazette.com)
  • In children, they see that the father has one and the mother does not, and this can sometimes lead to the fear in children that they might somehow lose theirs through castration Boeree, 2009. (kollec.life)
  • The fourth stage is the latent stage, which occurs during school age and is characterized by a focus on social relationships and the development of a sense of self. (kollec.life)
  • Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt: This occurs during the first few years of life and is characterized by the child's growing sense of independence and development of self-control. (kollec.life)
  • Identity versus role confusion: Occurs during adolescence and is characterized by the development of a sense of self and the exploration of different roles and identities. (kollec.life)
  • Intimacy vs. Isolation: This occurs during young adulthood and is characterized by the development of intimate relationships and a sense of belonging. (kollec.life)
  • An undercurrent of light-skinned blackness as a type of castration emerges within an ongoing story about the feminizing of light skin and the masculinizing of dark skin. (cornell.edu)
  • Taking an intentionalist view, this thesis ascribes a hypothetical intention to each author which is believed to communicate the core meaning of the literary work. (lu.se)
  • During the final stages, the person must learn to love, care for others, and develop a sense of integrity. (kollec.life)
  • Mulvey suggests two distinct modes of the male gaze of this era: "voyeuristic" (i.e., seeing woman as image "to be looked at") and "fetishistic" (i.e., seeing woman as a substitute for "the lack", the underlying psychoanalytic fear of castration ). (wikipedia.org)
  • However, at the novel's close, another man, Ugwu, is presented as the actual author of The Book . (lu.se)
  • She was formerly an Honorary Senior Lecturer in the Department of Psychoanalytic Studies at University College London, and a member of teaching staff at the Tavistock Clinic. (psychohistory.us)
  • In one sense, part of the power of queer studies, it seems to me, lies in the fact that it can be about pretty much everything, and everything, moreover, can be queered. (inthemedievalmiddle.com)
  • But even Class vouchsafes the Cheualry that a Hindu plan must be reworked to acquire a psychoanalytic important world in the humanity before we can understand that the last relationship resists Short, as for instructions that are always Thai. (wmz.com)
  • The path for the attainment of this pleasure becomes dependent of a perverse contract, with rigid and invariant clauses, that plays repeatedly the moments of horror of the castration, in the attempt to dominate it. (ndltd.org)
  • Nor is the coincidence of psychoanalytic themes and those of the horror genre only a contemporary phenomenon. (atmostfear-entertainment.com)
  • The psychoanalytic model which drew inspiration from the figure of Richard III gives us the image of a bitter, angry, vindictive neurotic. (dsq-sds.org)
  • But in psychoanalytic terms, the female figure poses a deeper problem. (metafilter.com)
  • Using this concept of the signifier, in the second addresses he gives us a straightforward definition of the subject: "The subject is what I define in the strict sense as an effect of the signifier" (p.79). (lacanonline.com)
  • By contrast, the two volumes of Holmes's more recent biography of Coleridge, especially the second volume, seem to Barrell to be the story of a " vie privée ," and to eschew a "more general sense of cultural or social or political history. (nybooks.com)
  • 3 In this discussion I, too, will refer to the author of Heroides 15 as Ovid. (openedition.org)
  • many readers still look up to Alice as a mythic embodiment of control, perseverance, bravery, and mature good sense. (wikipedia.org)
  • Sue Taylor, the author of this study, does an admirable job of analysing the conundrum one feels in appreciating Bellmer's art, with neither apologising for, nor vilifying the artist. (blogspot.com)
  • Only the retrospective gaze of the mature author can fully appreciate the transgressive traversal of demarcations as a metaphor for the necessary artistic, and prideful, defamiliarization of an all-too-familiar shame of family impoverishment. (literariness.org)
  • There is a sense that people are safe only if they are either inside their vehicles or engaging in sex outside them. (invisibleculturejournal.com)
  • One of the key disputes of the authenticity debate is whether the white author should tell the stories of black people. (lu.se)
  • Each novel's concern with the theme of white male authorship appears intentionalist, since both Adichie and Jones employ self-reflexivity, referring to their own writing, vis-à-vis the central white author character in the formulation of a final statement about authorial rights. (lu.se)