The Unconscious and Its Narratives

Capa
NYU 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.
In The Unconscious and Its Narratives, Professor Zvi Giora gives insight into the narrative elements of the unconscious by applying ideas gained from recent developments in cognitive psychology. To gain an understanding of unconscious narratives, Giora carefully considers the merits and limits, as well as the major achievements and contradictions, of Freudian theory.

 

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

Dreaming like waking
97
BreuerFreudFerenczi
114
Trauma or fantasy?
126

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Acerca do autor (1992)

Zvi Gioria is Professor of Psychology at Tel Aviv University, and author of The Unconscious and the Theory of Psychoneuroses, also published by New York University Press.

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