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Displacement

36 bytes added, 22:18, 27 May 2019
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It was in fact Freud's analysis of the [[Dream Work|dream work ]] that led him to discover the importance of displacement.
He noted in [[The Interpretation of Dreams]] that:
In his various revisions to his theories on [[dream]]s, [[Freud]] focused more on the [[separation]] of [[image]]s from the [[affect]]s that had been attached to [[them]], on the vicissitudes of these affects ([[displacement]], conservation, metamorphosis), and on the fate of [[images]] (stripped of [[affect]]) in relation to the "sensory intensity of the image presented."<ref>1900a, p. 306, n. 1</ref>
But it was above all in the process of refining the analysis of [[The Transference|the transference ]] during [[treatment]] and its different manifestations—lateral, indirect, and direct transference<ref>Freud, 1915a; Sandór Ferenczi, 1909/1994; Michel Neyraut, 1974</ref> — that the notion of [[displacement]] was expanded.
It was further explored, too, by such authors as [[Jacques Lacan]] (1957/2002; 1958/2002) and Guy Rosolato (1969) who took as their starting point the work of [[linguists]] (Ullmann, 1952; Jakobson and Halle, 1956) on the [[relationship]] between [[signifier]] and [[signified]], and on [[metonymy]] ([[displacement]] by [[contiguity]]) and [[metaphor]] ([[displacement]] by [[substitution]]).
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