Results for 'Shadow (Psychoanalysis)'

26 found
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  1.  97
    Shadow of the other: intersubjectivity and gender in psychoanalysis.Jessica Benjamin - 1997 - New York: Routledge.
    Shadow of the Other is a discussion of how the individual has two sorts of relationships with an "other"--other individuals. The first regards the other as a s work apart is her brilliant utilization of a systematic dialectical approach to her subject, always maintaining the delicate balance between opposing tensions: masculinity and femininity, subjectivity and objectivity, passivity and activity, love and aggression, fantasy and reality, modernism and postmodernism, the intrapsychic and the intersubjective. Benjamin s work apart is her brilliant (...)
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  2.  40
    The Shadow of the Object: Psychoanalysis of the Unthought Known.Christopher Bollas - 1989 - Columbia University Press.
    Basing his view on the object relations theories of the "British School" of psychoanalysis, Christopher Bollas examines the human subject's memories of its earliest experiences (during infancy and childhood) of the object, whether it be mother, father, or self. He explains in well-written and non-technical language how the object can affect the child, or "cast in shadow," without the child being able to process this relation through mental representations of language.
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  3.  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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  4.  20
    Psychoanalysis and Cinema: The Play of Shadows.Vicky Lebeau - 2002 - Columbia University Press.
    Lebeau examines the long and uneven history of developments in modern art, science, and technology that brought pychoanalysis and the cinema together towards the end of the nineteenth century. She explores the subsequent encounters between the two: the seductions of psychoanalysis and cinema as converging, though distinct, ways of talking about dream and desire, image and illusion, shock, and sexuality. Beginning with Freud's encounter with the spectacle of hysteria on display in fin-de-siècle Paris, this study offers a detailed reading (...)
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  5.  15
    On the Blissful Islands with Nietzsche & Jung: In the Shadow of the Superman.Paul Bishop - 2016 - New York: Routledge.
    What are the blissful islands? And where are they? This book takes as its starting-point the chapter called On the Blissful Islands in Part Two of Nietzsche s Thus Spoke Zarathustra, and its enigmatic conclusion: The beauty of the Superman came to me as a shadow. From this remarkable and powerful passage, it disengages the Nietzschean idea of the Superman and the Jungian notion of the shadow, moving these concepts into a new, interdisciplinary direction. In particular, On the (...)
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  6. That obscure object of psychoanalysis.Dany Nobus - 2013 - Continental Philosophy Review 46 (2):163-187.
    This essay examines how psychoanalytic conceptions of the subject and the object in the works of Freud and Lacan may contribute to a re-examination of the vexed issue of the subject–object relationship in science, philosophy and epistemology. For Freud, the ego is the essential subject, yet he regarded it as an always already objectified subject, which is objectively thinkable yet never subjectively knowable qua subject. Lacan conceptualised this Freudian principle of subjectivity with his notion of the divided (barred) subject, which (...)
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  7.  17
    The shadow of the eco: Denial and climate change.Elissa Marder - 2023 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 49 (2):139-150.
    This article argues that climate change puts excessive demands on the psyche. The omnipresent specter of climate change and global warming cannot be processed by individual psyches because there is little – if anything – that individual people can do to stop the devastation that hovers on the horizon. Unlike other disasters and calamities that have affected humans (war, genocide, nuclear destruction, pandemics, despotism) climate change presents unique challenges to the human psyche as it engages traumatic temporality on a global (...)
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  8. The shadow of heterosexuality.Drucilla Cornell - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (1):229-242.
    : In this essay, Cornell first invokes the concept of 'imaginary domain' to challenge the legal legitimacy of heterosexism in any form. She then claims that the imposition of heterosexism on the imaginary is a trauma whose severity can be grasped only with the help of psychoanalysis. Second, she argues that we cannot understand or undermine the power of heterosexist ideas without an alternative ethic of love. In beginning to think about a love that would necessarily pit itself against (...)
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  9.  35
    The Shadow of Heterosexuality.Drucilla Cornell - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (1):229-242.
    In this essay, Cornell first invokes the concept of ‘imaginary domain’ to challenge the legal legitimacy of heterosexism in any form. She then claims that the imposition of heterosexism on the imaginary is a trauma whose severity can be grasped only with the help of psychoanalysis. Second, she argues that we cannot understand or undermine the power of heterosexist ideas without an alternative ethic of love. In beginning to think about a love that would necessarily pit itself against heterosexism, (...)
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  10.  23
    “A Necessary Shadow of Being”: Irony, Imagination, and Personal Identity.Przemysław Bursztyka & Randall E. Auxier - 2022 - Studia Philosophica Wratislaviensia 17 (2):21-45.
    This is the second of the essays on the existential-ontological ground of otherness, in which we see this ground as essentially entwined with our personhood and our personal identities. We analyze irony as both a “mechanism” of constituting these very identities and as an act revealing their self-altering nature. Irony in our view — informed by Kierkegaard, phenomenology, and psychoanalysis — is a subtle existential strategy by means of which subjectivity (not “the subject”) not only asserts itself, but also, (...)
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  11.  22
    SCHELLING's SHADOW: merleau-ponty’s late concept of nature.Alexander Bilda - 2016 - Angelaki 21 (4):111-120.
    Merleau-Ponty’s later works, especially his 1956–57 lectures on Nature, offer a unique interpretation of Schelling’s philosophy as a whole. His systematic approach towards Schelling enables him to neglect the division of Schelling’s works into an early and a late period. Although his work on Schelling is not fully accurate with respect to the historic details, Merleau-Ponty succeeds in illuminating problems in Schelling’s philosophy that Schelling himself could not solve. The main thesis of my essay is that the two philosophers follow (...)
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  12.  5
    C.G. Jung and the crisis in Western civilization: the psychology of our time.John A. Cahman - 2020 - Asheville: Chiron Publications.
    The partisan split in American politics is the result of a major transformation of the West, as the psychology of the past based on hierarchy and privilege is being replaced by a psychology of equality. The status of women and minorities is at the center of this. The West's long history of inequality is gradually changing. When women's equality is considered symbolically, it represents the feminine rising to parity with the masculine, a status it has not held since prehistory. Minority (...)
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  13.  4
    Lacan & the Human Sciences.Alexandre Leupin - 1991 - U of Nebraska Press.
    The psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan (1901–81) left a legacy of thought that increasingly commands the attention of American scholars and critics. His provocative essays and wide-ranging seminars and lectures attempted, with remarkable success, to bridge the supposedly unbridgeable gap between the humanities and modern science. For some time his influence has shadowed the theoretical work being done in philosophy, psychology, anthropology, women’s studies, and literature. In Lacan and the Human Sciences eight eminent scholars examine how ideas entered these fields, how well (...)
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  14.  36
    The Odd One In: On Comedy.Alenka Zupan I. - 2008 - MIT Press.
    Why philosophize about comedy? What is the use of investigating the comical from philosophical and psychoanalytic perspectives? In The Odd One In, Alenka Zupancic [haceks over both cs] considers how philosophy and psychoanalysis can help us understand the movement and the logic involved in the practice of comedy, and how comedy can help philosophy and psychoanalysis recognize some of the crucial mechanisms and vicissitudes of what is called humanity. Comedy by its nature is difficult to pin down with (...)
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  15. The Odd One In: On Comedy.Alenka Zupancic - 2008 - MIT Press.
    Why philosophize about comedy? What is the use of investigating the comical from philosophical and psychoanalytic perspectives? In The Odd One In, Alenka Zupancic [haceks over both cs] considers how philosophy and psychoanalysis can help us understand the movement and the logic involved in the practice of comedy, and how comedy can help philosophy and psychoanalysis recognize some of the crucial mechanisms and vicissitudes of what is called humanity. Comedy by its nature is difficult to pin down with (...)
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  16.  26
    Enstranged Strangers: OOO, the Uncanny, and the Gothic.H. G. Bartholomew - 2019 - Open Philosophy 2 (1):357-383.
    Exploring the links between Speculative Realism, psychoanalysis, and literary criticism, this article examines OOO’s entanglement with the ‘uncanny’. Reading OOO against three notable treatments of the concept - Sigmund Freud’s 1919 essay “The ‘Uncanny’”, Ernst Jentsch’s 1906 paper “On the Psychology of the Uncanny”, and Martin Heidegger’s discussion of uncanniness in his Introduction to Metaphysics (1953) - it argues that OOO reconfigures the ‘uncanny’ as a profoundly ontological concept premised on aesthetic enstrangement. Using E.T.A. Hoffmann’s short story “The Sandman” (...)
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  17.  16
    Sidestepping the Problem of the Unconscious: Why We Ought to Reframe the Lacan/Merleau-Ponty Debate in Bodily Terms.Erica Harris - 2016 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 30 (3):267-277.
    At a colloquium in Bonneval, Lacan criticized Merleau-Ponty for his inability to account for the unconscious. For this reason he concluded the latter’s philosophy was fundamentally incompatible with psychoanalysis. This argument set the tone for scholars who studied the relationship between phenomenology and psychoanalysis. J. B. Pontalis, for example, famously argues that Merleau-Ponty misuses the term unconscious. According to Pontalis, Merleau-Ponty equates the unconscious with a “horizon” of possible experience: a moment of experience that is currently in (...) but can be brought to light.1 Psychoanalytic therapy does, in part, treat the unconscious as a territory that can be colonized by language... (shrink)
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  18.  11
    The Archive, the Native American, and Jefferson's Convulsions.Jonathan Elmer - 1998 - Diacritics 28 (4):5-24.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Archive, The Native American, and Jefferson’s ConvulsionsJonathan Elmer (bio)1 Saxa loquunturTrauma theory proposes that there are inscriptions that befuddle any clean divide between present and past, records that have been neither selected nor destroyed by evolutionary veto but remain in some kind of limbo, “in abeyance,” as Jacques Lacan phrases it, “awaiting attention.” In a typical maneuver, Lacan emphasizes a double meaning in the French—the “reality” awaiting attention (...)
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  19.  43
    The Dismantling of a Marionette Theater; Or, Psychology and the Misinterpretation of Literature.Erich Heller - 1978 - Critical Inquiry 4 (3):417-432.
    The force of [Heinrich von] Kleist's story "On the Marionette Theatre" . . . derives from roots deeply sunk into the soil of the past. It is a novel variation on a theme the first author of which may well be Plato. For according to Plato the human mind has been in the dark ever since it lost its place in the community of Truth, in the realm, that is, of the Ideas, the eternal and eternally perfect forms, those now (...)
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  20.  20
    Viral Law: Life, Death, Difference, and Indifference from the Spanish Flu to Covid-19.Mark Featherstone - 2022 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 35 (3):1019-1037.
    What is viral law? In order to being my discussion, I note that the last two years have been extremely difficult to understand and that we, meaning those who have lived through the pandemic, have struggled to make sense. Thus, I make the argument that the virus has impacted upon not only the individual’s ability to make sense in a world where every day routines have been upended, but also social and political structures that similarly rely on repetition to continue (...)
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  21.  2
    Time and the unconscious: daring and creativity in Wilfred R. Bion.Goriano Rugi - 2024 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Bion's unfashionable thought is a challenge for our times in which anesthesia and mass thinking prevail. The themes this book addresses are time and the unconscious. In the present/past, the here and now reveals its relationship with the unredeemable time, which conditions our behaviour and is at the root of a state of hallucinosis in the form of a short-sighted view that is distorted by deep-seated wounds. The book also highlights the resonances with contemporary epistemology and physics that underlie the (...)
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  22.  28
    Bataille and Sartre: The Modernity of Mysticism.Emoretta Yang & Jean-Michel Heimonet - 1996 - Diacritics 26 (2):59-73.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Bataille and Sartre: The Modernity of MysticismJean-Michel Heimonet (bio)Translated by Emoretta Yang (bio)1It is always relatively surprising to see how the great minds of an era manifest a kind of blindness when it comes to judging their peers, whether one is thinking of Balzac as the reader of Stendhal or Gide as the reader of Proust. This is undoubtedly because any truly forceful mind is also a mind so (...)
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  23.  9
    Visible Mind: Movies, Modernity and the Unconscious.Christopher Hauke - 2013 - Routledge.
    _Why is the moving image so important in our lives? What is the link between the psychology of Jung, Freud and films? How do film and psychology address the problems of modernity? _ _Visible Mind_ is a book about why film is so important to contemporary life, how film affects us psychologically as individuals, and how it affects us culturally as collective social beings. Since its inception, film has been both responsive to historical cultural conditions and reflective of changes in (...)
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  24.  17
    Foucault's Bad Angels of History.Lynne Huffer - 2011 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 1 (2):239-250.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Foucault's Bad Angels of HistoryLynne HufferDo not believe everything I say.... Look for multiple, resistant, rhizomatic readings. This is not the text I intended to produce, and it is not the same as the text you are reading. Read the white spaces, hear the silences, peer into the shadows, look beyond the margins. Reach for "[t]hat voice at the edge of things." I am there as well.—Juana María RodríguezWhat (...)
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  25.  36
    The "I" and the "not-I": a study in the development of consciousness.Mary Esther Harding - 1965 - Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
    This book provides a very accessible general introduction to the Jungian concept of ego development and Jung's theory of personality structure--the collective unconscious, anima, animus, shadow, archetypes.
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  26.  34
    Sem-analysing events: towards a cultural pedagogy of hope.Inna Semetsky - 2007 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 26 (3):253-265.
    This paper locates the concept of learning among real-life human experiences and events. Functioning as a sign, a meaningful event can be understood in terms of a cultural extra-linguistic “text.” Reading and interpreting diverse cultural “texts” are equivalent to constructing and learning critical symbolic lessons embedded in a continuous process of our experiential, both intellectual and ethical, growth. The paper employs Julia Kristeva’s theory of the abjection and her method of semanalysis as a synthesis of philosophy, psychoanalysis and semiotics. (...)
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