Cover image for On Freud's "Screen Memories".
On Freud's "Screen Memories".
Title:
On Freud's "Screen Memories".
Author:
Levine, Howard B.
ISBN:
9781782413011
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (225 pages)
Series:
The International Psychoanalytical Association Contemporary Freud: Turning Points and Critical Issues Series
Contents:
COVER -- CONTENTS -- CONTEMPORARY FREUD -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- EDITORS AND CONTRIBUTORS -- PART I"Screen memories"(1899a) -- PART II Discussion of "Screen memories" -- 1 Screen memories: a reintroduction -- 2 The screen memory and the act of remembering -- 3 Screen memories: the faculty of memory and the importance of the patient's history -- 4 The screen and behind it: manifest and latent themes in Freud's Über Deckerinnerungen -- 5 The waning of screen memories: from the Age of Neuroses to an Autistoid Age -- 6 "Screen memories" revisited -- 7 Reading Freud's semiotic passion -- 8 Phyllis Greenacre: screen memories and reconstruction -- 9 Screen memories today: a neuropsychoanalytic essay of definition -- 10 Some final thoughts on memory and screen memory -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.
Abstract:
The concept of "screen memories" was introduced by Freud for the first time in his 1899 paper, reprinted here in its entirety. Although the clinical interest in "screen memories" has perhaps diminished in recent analytic discussion, there is much to be gained from revisiting and re-examining both the phenomenon and Freud's original paper within a contemporary context. To this end, Gail S. Reed and Howard B. Levine have invited contributions from eight leading psychoanalysts on the current meaning and value to them of the screen memory concept. These comments come from contemporary psychoanalysts practicing in Italy, Francophone Switzerland, Argentina, Israel, and the United States of America, each of whom has been trained in one or another of a variety of psychoanalytic traditions, among which are ego psychology, a French version of Freud, an American version of Lacan and at least two variants of Kleinian thought - one British and one Latin American. Their comments range from advocating that screen memories are an important, even central, feature of contemporary analytic work (LaFarge, Cohen), to finding the concept less universally applicable, but nonetheless compelling (Ahumada). The editors hope that the encounter with these creative and thought-provoking commentaries will give new meaning to our appreciation of this important clinical phenomenon and stimulate further research and clinical observation into its origins and uses. Contributors: Jorge L. Ahumada, Franco De Masi, Rivka R. Eifermann, Lucy LaFarge, Nellie Thompson, Shlomith Cohen, Florence Guignard, Howard B. Levine, Gail S. Reed, and John P. Muller.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Added Author:
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: