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The culmination of over three decades of investigation into
traumatic processes, Repetition and Trauma is the late Max Stern's
pioneering reconceptualization of trauma in the light of recent
insights into the physiology and psychology of stress and the
"teleonomic" character of human evolution in developing defenses
against shock. As such, it is a highly original attempt to
reformulate certain basic tenets of psychoanalysis with the
findings of modern biology in general and neurobiology in
particular. At the core of Stern's effort is the integration of
laboratory research into sleep and dreaming so as to clarify the
meaning of pavor nocturnus. In concluding that these night terrors
represent "a defense against stress caused by threatening
nightmares," he exploits, though he interpretively departs from,
the laboratory research on dreams conducted by Charles Fisher and
others in the 1960s. From his understanding of pavor nocturnus as a
compulsion to repeat in the service of overcoming a developmental
failure to attribute meaning to states of tension, Stern enlarges
his inquiry to the phenomena of repetitive dreams in general. In a
brilliant reconstruction of Freud's Beyond the Pleasure Principle,
he suggests that Freud was correct in attributing the repetitive
phenomena of traumatic dreams to forces operating beyond the
pleasure principle, but holds that these phenomena can be best
illumined in terms of Freud's conception of mastery and Stern's own
notion of "reparative mastery."
The culmination of over three decades of investigation into
traumatic processes, Repetition and Trauma is the late Max Stern's
pioneering reconceptualization of trauma in the light of recent
insights into the physiology and psychology of stress and the
"teleonomic" character of human evolution in developing defenses
against shock. As such, it is a highly original attempt to
reformulate certain basic tenets of psychoanalysis with the
findings of modern biology in general and neurobiology in
particular. At the core of Stern's effort is the integration of
laboratory research into sleep and dreaming so as to clarify the
meaning of pavor nocturnus. In concluding that these night terrors
represent "a defense against stress caused by threatening
nightmares," he exploits, though he interpretively departs from,
the laboratory research on dreams conducted by Charles Fisher and
others in the 1960s. From his understanding of pavor nocturnus as a
compulsion to repeat in the service of overcoming a developmental
failure to attribute meaning to states of tension, Stern enlarges
his inquiry to the phenomena of repetitive dreams in general. In a
brilliant reconstruction of Freud's Beyond the Pleasure Principle,
he suggests that Freud was correct in attributing the repetitive
phenomena of traumatic dreams to forces operating beyond the
pleasure principle, but holds that these phenomena can be best
illumined in terms of Freud's conception of mastery and Stern's own
notion of "reparative mastery."
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