The Unconscious and Its NarrativesNYU Press, 1992 - 224 páginas Dreams often appear as remarkably coherent narratives. How does the mind organize the unconscious into the narrative forms exhibited by dreams, literary inspiration, and neuroses? Although the discovery of the unconscious is undeniably Freud's most crucial contribution to psychology, one that forms the cornerstone of psychoanalysis, the unconscious and its narrative tendencies remain largely a mystery--despite years of investigation. We still wonder about the meaning and origin of the stories told in our sleep. |
Índice
What a dream is | 2 |
Styles of dreaming and styles of thinking | 10 |
Styles of thinking and beyond | 21 |
Holograms microgenesis and mental effort | 31 |
The psychodynamics of bizarre dreams | 44 |
What dreams teach us | 56 |
promise and fulfillment | 72 |
The remembrance of dreams | 88 |
The unspoken motive | 133 |
Trauma revisited | 139 |
Rapport and transference | 152 |
From transference to real meeting | 166 |
Some guidelines for real meeting | 177 |
A daydreamer or an impostor? | 192 |
The writers intentions and the truth | 210 |
REFERENCES | 224 |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
Referências a este livro
Disorders of Narcissism: Diagnostic, Clinical, and Empirical Implications Elsa Ronningstam Pré-visualização indisponível - 1998 |