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Marsha Aileen Hewitt [4]Marsha Hewitt [2]
  1.  6
    Christian anti-Judaism and early object relations theory.Marsha Aileen Hewitt - 2018 - Critical Research on Religion 6 (3):226-242.
    The central ideas of early object relations theory are heavily inflected with Christian anti-Judaism, particularly as found in the work of Ian Dishart Suttie, now credited as the founder of this tradition. The critique of Freud launched by Suttie repudiates Freudian theory as a “disease” inextricably connected to Freud being a Jew. Suttie’s portrayal of Judaism both conforms to and replicates those theological commitments that privilege a triumphalist, supersessionist Christianity that breaks with Judaism, understood as devoid of love, ethics, and (...)
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  2.  21
    Freud on religion.Marsha Hewitt - 2014 - Bristol, CT, USA: Acumen Publishing.
    Sigmund Freud argued that religions originate in the unconscious needs, longings and fantasies of human minds. His work has served to highlight how any analysis of religion must explore mental life, both the cognitive and the unconscious. _Freud on Religion_ examines Freud's complex understanding of religious belief and practice. The book brings together contemporary psychoanalytic theory and case material from Freud's clinical practice to illustrate how the operations of the unconscious mind support various forms of religious belief, from mainstream to (...)
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  3. Brian D. Ingraffia, Postmodern Theory and Biblical Theology: Vanquishing God's Shadow Reviewed by.Marsha Aileen Hewitt - 1997 - Philosophy in Review 17 (2):105-107.
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  4. Legacies of the Occult: Psychoanalysis, Religion, and Unconscious Communication.Marsha Aileen Hewitt - unknown
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  5.  9
    Psychoanalysis, religious experience, and the study of religion: Not “religious studies”.Marsha Aileen Hewitt - 2013 - Critical Research on Religion 1 (1):25-32.
    Psychoanalytic critical theory explores the dynamics of individual identity formation within specific cultural contexts. Freud understood that psychoanalysis is a critical social theory as well as a therapeutic practice. His studies on religion illustrate the depths of society and culture within the mind. Freud was thus able to respond to Romain Rolland's experience of an “oceanic” or mystical feeling in thoroughly explanatory psychoanalytic terms that led him to speculate about pre-Oedipal memories of maternal care. Freud made an important contribution to (...)
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