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Pierre Janet's L'Automatisme Psychologique, originally published in
1889, is one of the earliest and most important books written on
the study of trauma and dissociation. Here it is made available, in
two volumes, in English for the first time, with a new preface by
Giuseppe Craparo and Onno van der Hart. The second volume,
Subconscious Acts, Anesthesias, and Psychological Disaggregation in
Psychological Automatism, covers four main topics. Beginning with
an examination of subconscious acts, Janet first assesses partial
catalepsies, subconscious acts, and posthypnotic suggestions, then
proceeds to a consideration of anesthesias and simultaneous
psychological existences. This is followed by discussion of several
forms of psychological disaggregation, including spiritism,
impulsive madness, hallucinations, and possessions. Finally, Janet
considers elements of mental weakness and strength, from misery to
judgement and will. Janet's work, with its many descriptions of
dissociative actions and the dissociative personality, will help
clinicians and researchers to develop insight in trauma-related
dissociation, and to become more adapt at relating to their
patients' dissociative actions. This seminal work will be of great
interest to researchers and students of psychoanalysis, philosophy,
and modernism, as well as psychotherapists and psychoanalysts
working with clients who have experienced trauma. It is accompanied
by Catalepsy, Memory, and Suggestion in Psychological Automatism:
Total Automatism.
Pierre Janet's L'Automatisme Psychologique, originally published in
1889, is one of the earliest and most important books written on
the study of trauma and dissociation. Here it is made available, in
two volumes, in English for the first time, with a new preface by
Giuseppe Craparo and Onno van der Hart. The second volume,
Subconscious Acts, Anesthesias, and Psychological Disaggregation in
Psychological Automatism, covers four main topics. Beginning with
an examination of subconscious acts, Janet first assesses partial
catalepsies, subconscious acts, and posthypnotic suggestions, then
proceeds to a consideration of anesthesias and simultaneous
psychological existences. This is followed by discussion of several
forms of psychological disaggregation, including spiritism,
impulsive madness, hallucinations, and possessions. Finally, Janet
considers elements of mental weakness and strength, from misery to
judgement and will. Janet's work, with its many descriptions of
dissociative actions and the dissociative personality, will help
clinicians and researchers to develop insight in trauma-related
dissociation, and to become more adapt at relating to their
patients' dissociative actions. This seminal work will be of great
interest to researchers and students of psychoanalysis, philosophy,
and modernism, as well as psychotherapists and psychoanalysts
working with clients who have experienced trauma. It is accompanied
by Catalepsy, Memory, and Suggestion in Psychological Automatism:
Total Automatism.
Pierre Janet's L'Automatisme psychologique, originally published in
1889, is one of the earliest and most important books written on
the study of trauma and dissociation. Here it is made available, in
two volumes, in English for the first time, with a new preface by
Giuseppe Craparo and Onno van der Hart. Catalepsy, Memory, and
Suggestion in Psychological Automatism, the first volume, examines
three aspects of trauma and dissociation. Janet first explores
catalepsy and analogous states, including comparing catalepsy to
somnambulism, then discusses somnambulism, memory, and forgetting.
Finally, Janet considers suggestion, amnesia, and distraction, as
well as considering characteristics of suggestible individuals.
Janet's work is an unsurpassed experimental study of human actions
in their simplest and most rudimentary forms, and a fundamental
contribution to our understanding of trauma-related dissociation.
This seminal work will be of great interest to researchers and
students of psychoanalysis, philosophy, and modernism, as well as
psychotherapists and psychoanalysts working with clients who have
experienced trauma. It is accompanied by Subconscious Acts,
Anesthesias, and Psychological Disaggregation in Psychological
Automatism: Partial Automatism.
Pierre Janet's L'Automatisme psychologique, originally published in
1889, is one of the earliest and most important books written on
the study of trauma and dissociation. Here it is made available, in
two volumes, in English for the first time, with a new preface by
Giuseppe Craparo and Onno van der Hart. Catalepsy, Memory, and
Suggestion in Psychological Automatism, the first volume, examines
three aspects of trauma and dissociation. Janet first explores
catalepsy and analogous states, including comparing catalepsy to
somnambulism, then discusses somnambulism, memory, and forgetting.
Finally, Janet considers suggestion, amnesia, and distraction, as
well as considering characteristics of suggestible individuals.
Janet's work is an unsurpassed experimental study of human actions
in their simplest and most rudimentary forms, and a fundamental
contribution to our understanding of trauma-related dissociation.
This seminal work will be of great interest to researchers and
students of psychoanalysis, philosophy, and modernism, as well as
psychotherapists and psychoanalysts working with clients who have
experienced trauma. It is accompanied by Subconscious Acts,
Anesthesias, and Psychological Disaggregation in Psychological
Automatism: Partial Automatism.
Pierre Janet's De l'Automatisme Psychologique, originally published
in 1889, is one of the earliest and most important books written on
the study of trauma and dissociation. Here it is made available in
English for the first time, with a new foreword by Giuseppe Craparo
and Onno van der Hart. Published here in two volumes, this seminal
work will be of great interest to researchers and students of
psychoanalysis, philosophy and modernism, as well as
psychotherapists and psychoanalysts working with clients who have
experienced trauma.
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