Freud's Patients
- 256 stránok
- 9 hodin čítania
An absorbing, moving sequence of portraits of the men and women treated by Sigmund Freud.
Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen skúma psychické „fakty“ ako konštruovaný fenomén, kde sa presnosť historických záznamov o duševných poruchách stretáva s neustálou redefiníciou. Jeho diela, ovplyvnené francúzskou postštrukturalistickou filozofiou, sa hlboko zaoberajú históriou a filozofiou psychiatrie a psychoanalýzy. Borch-Jacobsen je známy svojimi polemickými postojmi v neustálych debatách o psychoanalýze. Jeho prístup zdôrazňuje, ako sú psychické stavy formované historickými a spoločenskými kontextami.


An absorbing, moving sequence of portraits of the men and women treated by Sigmund Freud.
An Introduction
In this brief but comprehensive introduction to Freud's theories, Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen provides a step-by-step overview of his ideas regarding the unconscious, the cure, sexuality, drives, and culture, highlighting their indebtedness to contemporary neurophysiological and biological assumptions. The picture of Freud that emerges is very different from that of the fact-finding scientist he claimed to be. Bold conceptual innovations - repression, infantile sexuality, the Oedipus complex, narcissism, the death drive - were not discoveries made by Freud, but speculative constructs placed on clinical material to satisfy the requirements of the general theory of the mind and culture that he was building. Freud's Thinking provides a final accounting of this mirage of the mind that was psychoanalysis.