|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
This important book argues that apres-coup, a concept that has
blossomed in French psychoanalytic discourse, not only allows an
understanding of how repressed early memories determine adult life,
and how human sexuality develops, but also allows for a richer and
wider explanation of our mental structures and thinking. The book
outlines how apres-coup has been understood and defined by Freud,
Lacan and other authors, considers it in diverse psychoanalytic
cultures and explores its resonance in dream-work, sexual drives,
thought, and the experience of trauma. Bernard Chervet considers
that the totality of human thought can be approached according to
the theory of apres-coup. It offers a metapsychological approach to
the operation of apres-coup, bodily erogeneity and the regeneration
of libido. Chervet's compelling work argues that the phenomenon of
apres-coup allowed for the development of the psychoanalytic
theories of causality, sexuality, temporality, memory and trauma.
Illustrated by clinical vignettes and written by one of the leading
theorists on the topic, Apres-coup in Psychoanalysis will be an
invaluable resource for psychoanalysts in training and in practice.
This important book argues that apres-coup, a concept that has
blossomed in French psychoanalytic discourse, not only allows an
understanding of how repressed early memories determine adult life,
and how human sexuality develops, but also allows for a richer and
wider explanation of our mental structures and thinking. The book
outlines how apres-coup has been understood and defined by Freud,
Lacan and other authors, considers it in diverse psychoanalytic
cultures and explores its resonance in dream-work, sexual drives,
thought, and the experience of trauma. Bernard Chervet considers
that the totality of human thought can be approached according to
the theory of apres-coup. It offers a metapsychological approach to
the operation of apres-coup, bodily erogeneity and the regeneration
of libido. Chervet's compelling work argues that the phenomenon of
apres-coup allowed for the development of the psychoanalytic
theories of causality, sexuality, temporality, memory and trauma.
Illustrated by clinical vignettes and written by one of the leading
theorists on the topic, Apres-coup in Psychoanalysis will be an
invaluable resource for psychoanalysts in training and in practice.
|
|