The relationship of “psychoanalysis and language” was in the center of many theoretical and clinical discussions ever since Freud (1916/17) had declared:Nothing takes place in a psycho-analytic treatment but an interchange of words between the patient and the analyst. The patient talks, tells of his past experiences and presents impressions, complains, confesses his wishes and his emotional impulses. The doctor listens, tries to direct the patient’s processes of thought, exhorts, forces his attention in certain directions, gives him explanations and observes the reaction of understanding or rejection which he in this way provokes in him (p. 17)
Today, we are called to forget psychoanalysis in order to escape the confines of the subject and lan...
P sychoanalytic discourse often describes an ideal course of analy-sis, one that then becomes a norm...
Psychoanalysis does not have an easy stand in documenting what “clinical facts” are. This paper prop...
The relationship of “psychoanalysis and language” was in the center of many theoretical and clinical...
ABSTRACT : The « representation of things » and the « representation of words » are central and recu...
Two parallel strands developed since the start of the century in psychoanalysis. One was the relatio...
A fragment of a therapy session is discussed using some of the tools of discourse analysis in an eff...
There is no shortage of therapeutic modalities and interventions at the therapist’s disposal. Psycho...
Welcome to the first volume of the new journal Language and Psychoanalysis. The journal aims to prov...
The centrality of language for a Freudian theory of mind and treatment has not been retained by most...
© 2021 University of Edinburgh. All rights reserved.The significance of language in clinical practic...
[Abstract] It is customary to separate Freud’s early scientific years from his later psychoanalytic ...
22 pagesIn his 1891 On Aphasia Freud defines the “thing” in the terms of J.S. Mill’s empiricist phen...
When psychotherapists reify the concepts they are using to describe human experiences, both therapis...
Put simply, psychoanalysis is a theory that focuses on the dynamic relationship between the body, mi...
Today, we are called to forget psychoanalysis in order to escape the confines of the subject and lan...
P sychoanalytic discourse often describes an ideal course of analy-sis, one that then becomes a norm...
Psychoanalysis does not have an easy stand in documenting what “clinical facts” are. This paper prop...
The relationship of “psychoanalysis and language” was in the center of many theoretical and clinical...
ABSTRACT : The « representation of things » and the « representation of words » are central and recu...
Two parallel strands developed since the start of the century in psychoanalysis. One was the relatio...
A fragment of a therapy session is discussed using some of the tools of discourse analysis in an eff...
There is no shortage of therapeutic modalities and interventions at the therapist’s disposal. Psycho...
Welcome to the first volume of the new journal Language and Psychoanalysis. The journal aims to prov...
The centrality of language for a Freudian theory of mind and treatment has not been retained by most...
© 2021 University of Edinburgh. All rights reserved.The significance of language in clinical practic...
[Abstract] It is customary to separate Freud’s early scientific years from his later psychoanalytic ...
22 pagesIn his 1891 On Aphasia Freud defines the “thing” in the terms of J.S. Mill’s empiricist phen...
When psychotherapists reify the concepts they are using to describe human experiences, both therapis...
Put simply, psychoanalysis is a theory that focuses on the dynamic relationship between the body, mi...
Today, we are called to forget psychoanalysis in order to escape the confines of the subject and lan...
P sychoanalytic discourse often describes an ideal course of analy-sis, one that then becomes a norm...
Psychoanalysis does not have an easy stand in documenting what “clinical facts” are. This paper prop...