|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Offering a uniquely psychoanalytic developmental perspective on
male gender identity and the sense of maleness, this book provides
an in-depth analysis of the development of masculinity in childhood
and its continued evolution throughout a man's life. Drawing on
classical Freudian theory, as well as on more contemporary
psychoanalytic theories, this book explores early infancy and child
development, preoedipal factors and the oedipal complex, the
influence of parenting and the unconscious transmission of gendered
factors both by mothers and both biological and symbolic fathers,
the male ego ideal, social, cultural, and biological influences,
the role of inherent psychic bi-genderality in the context of
gender binaries, and the inherent gendered tensions and challenges
experienced as an individual progresses into adult and later life.
This book is original in its characterization of the male
developmental trajectory as underpinned by psychoanalytic
principles pertaining to conflict and inherent tensions that
continue throughout the life cycle and strongly impact other areas
of life. Deeply rooted in the unconscious, a man's multiply
determined sense of masculinity requires deconstructing the mother,
the feminine, and the other in the male psyche. As the text
illustrates via clinical vignettes, an awareness and an
understanding of these areas can improve the clinical work of
psychoanalysts working with men who struggle with the intrinsic
conflicts in their sense of maleness. This book will be of great
clinical value to psychoanalysts, psychotherapists and other mental
health practitioners, and will stimulate the thinking of scholars
in such areas as gender theory, psychodynamic and sociocultural
aspects of gender roles, and the changing social definition of
masculinity.
Offering a uniquely psychoanalytic developmental perspective on
male gender identity and the sense of maleness, this book provides
an in-depth analysis of the development of masculinity in childhood
and its continued evolution throughout a man's life. Drawing on
classical Freudian theory, as well as on more contemporary
psychoanalytic theories, this book explores early infancy and child
development, preoedipal factors and the oedipal complex, the
influence of parenting and the unconscious transmission of gendered
factors both by mothers and both biological and symbolic fathers,
the male ego ideal, social, cultural, and biological influences,
the role of inherent psychic bi-genderality in the context of
gender binaries, and the inherent gendered tensions and challenges
experienced as an individual progresses into adult and later life.
This book is original in its characterization of the male
developmental trajectory as underpinned by psychoanalytic
principles pertaining to conflict and inherent tensions that
continue throughout the life cycle and strongly impact other areas
of life. Deeply rooted in the unconscious, a man's multiply
determined sense of masculinity requires deconstructing the mother,
the feminine, and the other in the male psyche. As the text
illustrates via clinical vignettes, an awareness and an
understanding of these areas can improve the clinical work of
psychoanalysts working with men who struggle with the intrinsic
conflicts in their sense of maleness. This book will be of great
clinical value to psychoanalysts, psychotherapists and other mental
health practitioners, and will stimulate the thinking of scholars
in such areas as gender theory, psychodynamic and sociocultural
aspects of gender roles, and the changing social definition of
masculinity.
For decades, mothers were thought to be the only real influence on
a child. Now we recognize that the father's involvement also has a
profound impact, but how sons affect their fathers is too-often
overlooked. In "My Father Before Me" psychoanalyst Michael J.
Diamond firmly establishes fatherhood as an essential event for
both the son's and the father's development. With chapters
analyzing the father/son relationship throughout the life cycle,
and demonstrating the powerful influence between them, Diamond
calls for a more inclusive notion of masculinity, thus allowing men
to access parts of themselves they previously ignored. He argues
that sons are largely responsible for helping their fathers embrace
this more flexible notion of manhood, making them better partners
and better parents. Diamond has written an important book that
enables us to make sense of the question: what does it truly mean
to be a man.
|
|