Results for 'Psychoanalysis and anthropology'

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  1. Psychoanalysis and anthropology: on the temporality of analysis.James Weiner - 1999 - In Henrietta L. Moore (ed.), Anthropological Theory Today. Polity Press. pp. 234--261.
     
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  2.  18
    Symbolic Interpretation in Psychoanalysis and Anthropology.Robert A. Paul - 1980 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 8 (4):286-294.
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  3.  22
    Culture, subject, psyche: dialogues in psychoanalysis and anthropology.Anthony Molino (ed.) - 2004 - Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press.
    In this groundbreaking new work, Anthony Molino has collected in-depth interviews with seven renowned anthropologists and social theorists: MARC AUGE, VINCENT CRAPANZANO, KATHERINE EWING, GANANATH OBEYESEKERE, MICHAEL RUSTIN, KATHLEEN ...
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  4.  17
    Psychoanalysis and Its Resistances in Michel Foucault's The History of Sexuality: Lessons for Anthropology.P. Steven Sandgren - 2004 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 32 (1):110-122.
  5.  8
    Psychoanalysis and/as Philosophy? The Anthropological Significance of Pathology in Freud’s Three Essays On The Theory Of Sexualityand in the Psychoanalytic Tradition.Elizabeth Rottenberg, Philippe van Haute & Elissa Marder - 2006 - Philosophy Today 50 (Supplement):90-97.
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  6.  39
    Psychoanalysis and/as philosophy? The anthropological significance of pathology in Freud's Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality and in the psychoanalytic tradition.Phillipe van Haute - 2005 - Natureza Humana 7 (2):359-374.
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  7.  52
    Psychoanalysis and/as Philosophy? The Anthropological Significance of Pathology in Freud’s Three Essays On The Theory Of Sexualityand in the Psychoanalytic Tradition.Philippe Van Haute - 2006 - Philosophy Today 50 (Supplement):90-97.
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  8.  18
    Culture, Subject, and Psyche: Dialogues in Psychoanalysis and Anthropology. Anthony Molino, ed. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2004. xv + 217 pp. [REVIEW]Sara E. Lewis - 2010 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 38 (1):1-3.
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  9.  8
    Psychoanalysis and the Human Sciences.Louis Althusser - 2016 - Columbia University Press.
    What can psychoanalysis, a psychological approach developed more than a century ago, offer us in an age of rapidly evolving, hard-to-categorize ideas of sexuality and the self? Should we abandon Freud's theories completely or adapt them to new findings and the new relationships taking shape in modern liberal societies? In a remarkably prescient series of lectures delivered in the early 1960s, the French philosopher Louis Althusser anticipated the challenges that psychoanalytic theory would face as politics moved away from structuralist (...)
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  10.  20
    Book Review: Rockwell F. Clancy, Towards a Political Anthropology in the Work of Gilles Deleuze: Psychoanalysis and Anglo-American Literature. [REVIEW]Ronald Bogue - 2018 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 26 (1):134-137.
    A review of Rockwell F. Clancy, Towards a Political Anthropology in the Work of Gilles Deleuze: Psychoanalysis and Anglo-American Literature.
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  11.  19
    Psychoanalysis and Phenomenology.Thomas J. Csordas - 2012 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 40 (1):54-74.
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  12.  64
    Sartre's Phenomenological Anthropology between Psychoanalysis and 'Daseinsanalysis'.Alain Flajoliet - 2010 - Sartre Studies International 16 (1):40-59.
    This essay compares Sartre's existential psychoanalysis with Freud's psychoanalysis and Binswanger's Daseinsanalysis . On the one hand, Sartre's psychoanalysis, despite the pure phenomenological interpretation of the factical self (in the first part of Being and Nothingness ), is ultimately metaphysically founded on the concept of 'human reality' (in the fourth part of the book), so that this psychoanalysis cannot be identified with the way of interpreting existence in the Daseinsanalyse . On the other hand, Sartre's phenomenological (...)
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  13.  36
    Phenomenology, psychoanalysis, and subjectivity in Java.Byron J. Good - 2012 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 40 (1):24-36.
  14.  8
    Philosophical and Anthropological Foundations of Psychosynthesis by Roberto Assaggioli.V. Y. Popov & Е. V. Popova - 2023 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 24:5-17.
    _Purpose._ The authors aim to reveal the influence of philosophical and esoteric principles on the formation and further development of Roberto Assagioli’s concept of psychosynthesis. _The theoretical basis_ of the study is determined by the latest methodological approaches in the study of the relationship between philosophical, psychological, and esoteric approaches in the study of the unconscious and the formation of a harmonious personality. _Originality._ For the first time, a systematic analysis of the anthropological foundations of Roberto Assagioli’s work has been (...)
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  15.  8
    Psychoanalysis and Sociology.Donald N. Levine - 1978 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 6 (3):175-185.
  16.  40
    A Note on Psychoanalysis and the Critical Study of Whiteness.David Roediger - 2013 - Radical Philosophy Review 16 (1):345-348.
    This brief response to John Abromeit’s “Whiteness as a Form of Bourgeois Anthropology?” takes up the ways in which, beyond Horkheimer, the Frankfurt School and psychoanalysis have shaped Roediger’s historical writings on whiteness. In particular, it considers as inspirations for those writings the work of Herbert Marcuse, Wilhelm Reich, George Rawick, and the surrealist tradition.
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    A Note on Psychoanalysis and the Critical Study of Whiteness.David Roediger - 2013 - Radical Philosophy Review 16 (1):345-348.
    This brief response to John Abromeit’s “Whiteness as a Form of Bourgeois Anthropology?” takes up the ways in which, beyond Horkheimer, the Frankfurt School and psychoanalysis have shaped Roediger’s historical writings on whiteness. In particular, it considers as inspirations for those writings the work of Herbert Marcuse, Wilhelm Reich, George Rawick, and the surrealist tradition.
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  18.  15
    The Question of Applied Psychoanalysis and the Interpretation of Cultural Symbolism.Robert A. Paul - 1987 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 15 (1):82-103.
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  19.  4
    The Business of Being Made: The Temporalities of Reproductive Technologies, in Psychoanalysis and Culture.Katie Gentile (ed.) - 2015 - Routledge.
    _The Business of Being Made_ is the first book to critically analyze assisted reproductive technologies from a transdisciplinary perspective integrating psychoanalytic and cultural theories. It is a ground-breaking collection exploring ARTs through diverse methods including interview research, clinical case studies, psychoanalytic based ethnography, and memoir. Gathering clinicians and researchers who specialize in this area, this book engages current research in psychoanalysis, sociology, anthropology, philosophy and debates in feminist, queer and cultural theory about affect, temporality, and bodies. With (...) as its fulcrum, _The Business of Being Made_ explores the social constructions and personal experiences of ARTs. Katie Gentile frames the cultural context, exploring the ways ARTs have become a complex form of playing with time, attempting to manufacture a hopeful future in the midst of growing global uncertainty. The contributors then present a range of varied experiences related to ARTs, including: Interviews with women and men undergoing ARTs; A psychoanalytic memoir of male infertility; Clinical research and work with transgender, gay and lesbian patients creating new Oedipal constellations, the experiences of LBGTQ people within the medical system and the variety of families that emerge; Research on the experiences of egg donors and a corresponding clinical case study of successful egg donation; The experiences of ongoing failure which is the often unacknowledged for ART procedures; How and when people choose to stop using ARTs; A psychoanalytic ethnography of a neonatal intensive care unit populated in part with the babies created through these technologies and their parents, haggard and in shock after years of failed attempts. Full of original material, _The Business of Being Made_ conveys the ambivalence of these technologies without simplifying their complicated consequences for the bodies of individuals, the family, cultures, and our planet. This book will be relevant to clinicians, medical and psychological personnel working in assisted reproductive technologies and infertility, as well as academics working in the fields of sociology, literature, queer and feminist theories and at the intersections of cultural, critical and psychoanalytic theories. (shrink)
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  20.  6
    The Oedipus complex, focus of the psychoanalysis-anthropology dispute.Éric Smadja - 2017 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This book examines the contentious relationship between psychoanalysis and anthropology as it has played out in disputes surrounding the Oedipus complex. Here, Eric Smadja explores the complicated historical and epistemological conditions leading up to the emergence of the conflict between the two disciplines. He considers the origins of each science, the "creation" of the Oedipus complex, and the place, role and influence of Freud's key and controversial work Totem and Taboo, both in the history of psychoanalysis and (...)
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  21.  79
    Freud, Bion and Kant : epistemology and anthropology in The interpretation of dreams.Stella Sandford - 2017 - International Journal of Psychoanalysis 98 (1):91-110.
    This interdisciplinary article takes a philosophical approach to The Interpretation of Dreams, connecting Freud to one of the few philosophers with whom he sometimes identified - Immanuel Kant. It aims to show that Freud's theory of dreams has more in common with Bion's later thoughts on dreaming than is usually recognized. Distinguishing, via a discussion of Kant, between the conflicting 'epistemological' and 'anthropological' aspects of The Interpretation of Dreams, it shows that one specific contradiction in the book - concerning the (...)
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  22.  9
    Philippe van Haute and Tomas Geyskens , A Non-Oedipal Psychoanalysis? A Clinical Anthropology of Hysteria in the Works of Freud and Lacan . Reviewed by.Stephanie Swales Scalambrino - 2014 - Philosophy in Review 34 (3-4):174-176.
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  23. State of the art/science.In Anthropology - 1996 - In Paul R. Gross, N. Levitt & Martin W. Lewis (eds.), The Flight From Science and Reason. The New York Academy of Sciences. pp. 327.
     
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  24.  17
    Giorgio Agamben, Infancy and History: On the Destruction ofExperience (London: Verso, 2007). William S. Allen, Ellipsis: Of Poetry and the Experience of Language After Heidegger, Hölderlin, and Blanchot (Albany: SUNY Press, 2007). Louis Althusser, Politics and History: Montesquieu, Rousseau, Marx (London. [REVIEW]Beyond Psychoanalysis - 2007 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 28 (2).
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  25.  15
    A work of cryptology: Review of Stephen James Newtons Painting, Psychoanalysis, and Spirituality. [REVIEW]D. Smith - 2002 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 9 (3):83-87.
    Chi biasima la pittura, biasima la natura . . . . Stephen Newton is a 53 year old professional artist with a doctorate from the Centre for Psychotherapeutic Studies at the University of Sheffield. He is therefore one of a niche academic fraternity working the disputed borderlands between empirical cognitive science, psychoanalysis as a school of neurophilosophy, psychoanalysis as a clinical professionalism, and the philosophy of art. This is his first high profile book, and it stands proudly in (...)
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  26.  35
    Wisdom Won From Illness: Essays in Philosophy and Psychoanalysis.Jonathan Lear - 2017 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
    What is the appropriate relation of human reason to the human psyche--indeed, to human life--taken as a whole? The essays in this volume range over literature and ethics, psychoanalysis, social theory, and ancient Greek philosophy. But, from different angles, they all address this question. Wisdom Won from Illness probes deep into the heart of psychoanalysis to understand how it illuminates the human condition. At the same time it goes back to the origins of psychological thinking in ancient Greece--and (...)
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  27.  17
    Shadow dialogues: on the (early) history of anthropology and psychoanalysis.Wesley Shumar - 2004 - In Anthony Molino (ed.), Culture, subject, psyche: dialogues in psychoanalysis and anthropology. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press. pp. 3--19.
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  28. Statement on human rights (1947) and commentaries.American Anthropological Association, Julian Steward & H. G. Barnett - 2009 - In Mark Goodale (ed.), Human rights: an anthropological reader. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
     
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  29.  7
    The Religious and Romantic Origins of Psychoanalysis: Individuation and Integration in Post-Freudian Theory.Suzanne R. Kirschner - 1996 - Cambridge University Press.
    In this book, Suzanne Kirschner traces the origins of contemporary psychoanalysis back to the foundations of Judaeo-Christian culture, and challenges the prevailing view that modern theories of the self mark a radical break with religious and cultural tradition. Instead, she argues, they offer an account of human development which has its beginnings in biblical theology and neoplatonic mysticism. Drawing on a wide range of religious, literary, philosophical and anthropological sources, Dr Kirschner demonstrates that current Anglo-American psychoanalytic theories are but (...)
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  30.  16
    Folklore and Psychoanalysis: The Swallowing Monster and Open‐Brains Allomotifs in Plains Indian Mythology.Michael P. Carroll - 1992 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 20 (3):289-303.
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  31.  5
    Speculations After Freud: Psychoanalysis, Philosophy and Culture.Michael Munchow & Sonu Shamdasani (eds.) - 1994 - New York: Routledge.
    Psychoanalysis has transformed our culture. We constantly use and refer to ideas from psychoanalysis, often unconsciously. Psychology, philosophy, politics, sociology, women's studies, anthropology, literary studies, cultural studies, and other disciplines have been permeated by the competing schools of psychoanalysis. But what of psychoanalysis itself? Where is it going one hundred years after Freud's own speculations took shape? Does it still have a role to play in cultural debate, or should it perhaps be abandoned? Speculations After (...)
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  32.  19
    Homo Natura: Nietzsche, Philosophical Anthropology and Biopolitics.Vanessa Lemm - 2020 - Edinburgh University Press.
    Nietzsche coins the enigmatic term homo natura to capture his understanding of the human being as a creature of nature and tasks philosophy with the renaturalisation of humanity. Following Foucault's critique of the human sciences, Vanessa Lemm discusses the reception of Nietzsche's naturalism in philosophical anthropology, psychoanalysis and gender studies. She offers an original reading of homo natura that brings back the ancient Greek idea of nature and sexuality as creative chaos and of the philosophical life as outspoken (...)
  33.  26
    Indifference and Envy: The Anthropological Analysis of Modern Economy.Paul Dumouchel - 2003 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 10 (1):149-160.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:INDIFFERENCE AND ENVY: THE ANTHROPOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF MODERN ECONOMY Paul Dumouchel University ofQuébec-Montréal 1. Girard and economics René Girard himself has not written very much on economics, at least explicitly. Though his works are full ofinsights into and short remarks on the sacrificial origin of different economic phenomena or the way in which mimetic relations and commercial transactions are often intertwined and act upon each other.1 Unlike religion, psychology, (...)
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  34.  27
    The ability to mourn: disillusionment and the social origins of psychoanalysis.Peter Homans - 1989 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    Peter Homans offers a new understanding of the origins of psychoanalysis and relates the psychoanalytic project as a whole to the sweep of Western culture, past and present. He argues that Freud's fundamental goal was the interpretation of culture and that, therefore, psychoanalysis is fundamentally a humanistic social science. To establish this claim, Homans looks back at Freud's self-analysis in light of the crucial years from 1906 to 1914 when the psychoanalytic movement was formed and shows how these (...)
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  35.  7
    Christianity & psychoanalysis: a new conversation.Earl D. Bland (ed.) - 2014 - Downers Grove, Illinois: IVP Academic, a division of InterVarsity Press.
    The past 30 years has seen a theoretical and clinical renaissance in psychoanalysis, as well as a flourishing of Christian engagement in the fields of psychology and anthropology. This volume of essays stages a new conversation between Christianity and psychoanalysis that opens up new ways of thinking about the rich mosaic of human experience.
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  36.  7
    Speculations After Freud: Psychoanalysis, Philosophy, and Culture.Michael Munchow & Sonu Shamdasani (eds.) - 1994 - New York: Routledge.
    This collection of essays at the juncture between psychoanalysis, philosophy, and cultural studies questions the future of a discipline which has emerged from the intimate experience of therapy to exert a powerful hold over contemporary culture.Psychoanalysis has transformed our culture. We constantly use and refer to ideas from psychoanalysis, often unconsciously. Psychology, philosophy, politics, sociology, women's studies, anthropology, literary studies, cultural studies, and other disciplines have been permeated by the competing schools of psychoanalysis. But what (...)
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  37. Declaration on anthropology and human rights (1999).Committe for Human Rights & American Anthropological Association - 2009 - In Mark Goodale (ed.), Human rights: an anthropological reader. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
     
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  38.  7
    Towards a Political anthropology in the work of Gilles Deleuze.Rockwell F. Clancy - 2015 - Leuven, Belgium: Leuven University Press.
    This work explores the significance of two recurring themes in the thought of Gilles Deleuze: his critique of psychoanalysis and praise for Anglo-American literature. Tracing the overlooked influence of English writer D.H. Lawrence on Deleuze, Rockwell Clancy shows how these themes ultimately bear on two competing 'political anthropologies', conceptions of the political and the respective accounts of philosophical anthropology on which they are based. Contrary to the mainstream of both Deleuze studies and contemporary political thought, Clancy argues that (...)
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  39.  17
    The Line of Anxiety: Anthropological and Psychoanalytical Notes on the Line of Individuation in the Age of Bastards and Zombies.Ronnie Lippens - 2023 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 36 (3):1259-1279.
    Psychoanalysis knows two things at least. First, that all human endeavour and all human failure is imbued with anxiety, and that, therefore, to diagnose human endeavour, or to diagnose failure, is to locate the nature and origin of anxiety. And second, that anxiety itself amplifies the need to “diagnose” human being, and human beings. Psychoanalysts, in other words, know that for them to be able to do the work of psychoanalysis, they need to be (cultural) anthropologists first. In (...)
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  40.  40
    On Inaccessibility and Vulnerability: Some Horizons of Compatibility between Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis.C. Jason Throop - 2012 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 40 (1):75-96.
  41. Anthropology and Cross‐Cultural Analysis.Henrietta L. Moore - 1992 - In Elizabeth Wright (ed.), Feminism and Psychoanalysis: A Critical Dictionary. Blackwell. pp. 3--9.
     
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  42.  16
    All the Mothers Are One: Hindu India and the Cultural Reshaping of Psychoanalysis.Stanley N. Kurtz - 1992 - Columbia University Press.
    Based on the author's ethnographic research in India, the book explores the psychology of Hinduism, and offers an innovative synthesis of psychoanylsis with modern anthropological theories of cultural difference. Stanley N. Kurtz offers a new interpretation of the multiple "mother goddesses" of Hinduism, and explores how this multiplicity is key to understanding early childhood experience in which a child is raised by many "mothers" in the Hindu joint family. Arguing that traditional psychoanalytic approaches to Indian culture have applied Western models (...)
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  43.  10
    Bodies and Persons: Comparative Perspectives from Africa and Melanesia.Michael Joshua Lambek, Michael Lambek, Professor of Anthropology Michael Lambek & Andrew Strathern - 1998 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book suggests a bold comparative approach to broad cultural differences between Africa and Melanesia. Its theme is personhood, understood in terms of what anthropologists call embodiment. These concepts are applied to questions ranging from the meanings of spirit possession, to the logics of witchcraft and kinship relations, the use of rituals in healing, and even the impact of capitalism. Questioning common assumptions about the huge differences among these discrete areas, the contributions document surprising continuities.
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  44.  12
    Philosophical Anthropology.Paul Ricoeur - 2015 - Malden MA: Polity.
    How do human beings become human? This question lies behind the so-called human sciences. But these disciplines are scattered among many different departments and hold up a cracked mirror to humankind. This is why, in the view of Paul Ricoeur, we need to develop a philosophical anthropology, one that has a much older history but still offers many untapped resources. This appeal to a specifically philosophical approach to questions regarding what it was to be human did not stop Ricoeur (...)
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  45.  4
    Cognitive Anthropology.Charles W. Nuckolls - 2017 - In William Bechtel & George Graham (eds.), A Companion to Cognitive Science. Oxford, UK: Blackwell. pp. 140–145.
    The study of the relationship between culture and mind is cognitive anthropology. Its primary objects of study are knowledge and thinking, mostly as these appear in naturally occurring settings. Cognitive anthropology's main contribution has been to show that there are important cultural differences in perception, memory, and inference. Recently, the field has begun to consider emotions and their power to motivate cognition, historically among the most neglected subjects in cognitive science. This is leading to an interesting rapprochement with (...)
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  46.  19
    In Exile from the Self: National Belonging and Psychoanalysis in Buenos Aires.Jeffrey Bass - 2006 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 34 (4):433-455.
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  47.  4
    Psychoanalysis of Evil: Perspectives on Destructive Behavior.Henry Kellerman - 2014 - Cham: Imprint: Springer.
    For all our knowledge of psychopathology and sociopathology--and despite endless examinations of abuse and torture, mass murder and genocide--we still don't have a real handle on why evil exists, where it derives from, or why it is so ubiquitous. A compelling synthesis of diverse schools of thought, Psychoanalysis of Evil identifies the mental infrastructure of evil and deciphers its path from vile intent to malignant deeds. Evil is defined as manufactured in the psyche: the acting out of repressed wishes (...)
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  48. The Annual of Psychoanalysis, V. 21.Jerome A. Winer - 1993 - Routledge.
    Volume 21 of _The Annual of Psychoanalysis_ is especially welcome for bringing to English-language readers timely contributions from abroad in an opening section on "Psychoanalysis in Europe." The section begins with a translation of Helmut Thomae's substantial critique of the current state of psychoanalytic education; Thomae's proposal for comprehensive reform revolves around a redefinition of the status of the training analysis in analytic training. Diane L'Heureux-Le Beuf's clinical diary of an analysis focusing on the narcissistic elements of oedipal conflict (...)
     
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  49.  18
    The Receding Animal: Theorizing Anxiety and Attachment in Psychoanalysis from Freud to Imre Hermann.Lydia Marinelli & Andreas Mayer - 2016 - Science in Context 29 (1):55-76.
    ArgumentAnimals played an important role in the formation of psychoanalysis as a theoretical and therapeutic enterprise. They are at the core of texts such as Freud's famous case histories of Little Hans, the Rat Man, or the Wolf Man. The infantile anxiety triggered by animals provided the essential link between the psychology of individual neuroses and the ambivalent status of the “totem” animal in so-called primitive societies in Freud's attempt to construct an anthropological basis for the Oedipus complex in (...)
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  50. From Nature to Culture? Diogenes and Philosophical Anthropology.Christian Lotz - 2005 - Human Studies 28 (1):41-56.
    This essay is concerned with the central issue of philosophical anthropology: the relation between nature and culture. Although Rousseau was the first thinker to introduce this topic within the modern discourse of philosophy and the cultural sciences, it has its origin in Diogenes the Cynic, who was a disciple of Socrates. In my essay I (1) historically introduce a few aspects of philosophical anthropology, (2) deal with the nature–culture exchange, as introduced in Kant, then I (3) relate this (...)
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