Cover image for Influential Papers from the 1940s.
Influential Papers from the 1940s.
Title:
Influential Papers from the 1940s.
Author:
Hinshelwood, R.D.
ISBN:
9781849404716
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (375 pages)
Series:
The IJPA Key Papers Series
Contents:
COVER -- SERIES PREFACE -- ABOUT THE EDITOR -- Introduction to the Journal in the 1940s -- PART I: Claiming an intellectual heritage -- Introduction -- Paper selected:Science and belief -- PART II: Metapsychology -- Introduction -- Papers selected:The development and problems of the theory of the instincts -- The nature and function of phantasy -- PART III: The Independent group -- Introduction -- Papers selected:Early developmental states of the ego: primary object love -- Endopsychic structure considered in terms ofobject-relationships -- Primitive emotional development -- PART IV:Infant observation -- Introduction -- Papers selected:The influence of early environment in the development of neurosis and neurotic character -- The observation of infants in a set situation -- PART V: Klein's revision -- Introduction -- Papers selected:A contribution to the problem of sublimation and itsrelation to processes of internalization -- Notes on some schizoid mechanisms.
Abstract:
The 1940s was a time of great change in the psychoanalytic world. The war sounded a deathblow to continental European psychoanalysis and the death of Freud at first brought uncertainty over the future of psychoanalysis but ultimately led to greater creative freedom in exploring new ideas and theories. These years marked the birth of post-Freudian issues. There was a reflective attitude towards psychoanalysis itself, caused by Freud's death and the diaspora of analysts. There were new debates on the relations between psychoanalysis and subjects such as philosophy and biology. There was a good deal of freedom to review metapsychology, and ideas such as the development of group therapy, now established, were starting to take root.A new generation of analysts began to emerge at this time, those who would become highly significant in the development of British psychoanalysis and the object-relations school in later years. The 1940s was the first post-Freudian decade and the most British decade of the International Journal. They marked an abundance of new ideas and new individuals that would grow to leave their mark on the subsequent decades.
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.
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