The article investigates the question of the experiential location of the area of play, comparing the accounts of Eugen Fink and Donald Winnicott. It argues that while Fink builds on the phenomenological distinction between subjective phantasy and external perception, and accordingly introduces the area of play as a hybrid realm, a peculiar combination of the two, Winnicott considers the area of play as something that underlies and developmentally precedes the experiential differentiation between phantasy and external reality. While from Fink’s viewpoint Winnicott’s model neglects a central phenomenological distinction, from Winnicott’s viewpoint Fink’s account, in turn, appears adultomorphic. Elaborating on these viewpoints in detail, the ...
The research question was stirred by observations that the set-up of the clinical situation seems to...
The purpose of this study is to clarify how we grasp the concept of "play in early childhood through...
For the psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott, playing constitutes a “positive value of illusion” which, fo...
The paper offers a review of the development of the concept of play and playing. The true beginnings...
The paper takes into consideration the relationship between philosophical anthropology and phenomeno...
This thesis is an examination of kinaesthetic play from the lived experience of the player. The aim ...
This article distributes a psychological reading of William Somerset Maugham's of Human Bondage acco...
This article distributes a psychological reading of William Somerset Maugham’s of Human Bondage acco...
Winnicott was a British psychoanalyst famous for identifying an area of experiencing between inner p...
This paper aims to present a socio-psychoanalytic view of the importance of play and wishes to highl...
In a wide-ranging essay that reviews the major theories of plays and relates them to significant not...
<p>Modern game scholarship in the past two decades has known two dominant, yet paradoxical, tendenci...
How to theorize the subject of play? The modern field of game studies knows two paradoxical ontologi...
Since Johan Huizinga’s Homo Ludens, 1938, few books have treated adult play at an abstract level usi...
International audienceWe usually retain an optimistic version of Winnicott’s theory of play : that p...
The research question was stirred by observations that the set-up of the clinical situation seems to...
The purpose of this study is to clarify how we grasp the concept of "play in early childhood through...
For the psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott, playing constitutes a “positive value of illusion” which, fo...
The paper offers a review of the development of the concept of play and playing. The true beginnings...
The paper takes into consideration the relationship between philosophical anthropology and phenomeno...
This thesis is an examination of kinaesthetic play from the lived experience of the player. The aim ...
This article distributes a psychological reading of William Somerset Maugham's of Human Bondage acco...
This article distributes a psychological reading of William Somerset Maugham’s of Human Bondage acco...
Winnicott was a British psychoanalyst famous for identifying an area of experiencing between inner p...
This paper aims to present a socio-psychoanalytic view of the importance of play and wishes to highl...
In a wide-ranging essay that reviews the major theories of plays and relates them to significant not...
<p>Modern game scholarship in the past two decades has known two dominant, yet paradoxical, tendenci...
How to theorize the subject of play? The modern field of game studies knows two paradoxical ontologi...
Since Johan Huizinga’s Homo Ludens, 1938, few books have treated adult play at an abstract level usi...
International audienceWe usually retain an optimistic version of Winnicott’s theory of play : that p...
The research question was stirred by observations that the set-up of the clinical situation seems to...
The purpose of this study is to clarify how we grasp the concept of "play in early childhood through...
For the psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott, playing constitutes a “positive value of illusion” which, fo...