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  • ...actors. For Abraham, the [[structure]] of melancholia is closer to that of obsessive [[neurosis]] on account of the intense hostility toward the outside world.
    7 KB (983 words) - 19:22, 20 May 2019
  • ...concepts 'projection' and 'ambivalence' he developed during his work with neurotic [[patients]] in [[Vienna]] to discuss the relationship between taboo and to Like [[neurotic]]s, 'primitive' peoples feel ambivalent [[about]] most people in their live
    10 KB (1,396 words) - 02:41, 21 May 2019
  • ...specializing in nerve and brain damage. After using [[hypnosis]] on his [[neurotic]] [[patients]] for a long period, he abandoned this [[form]] of [[treatment ...around the Oedipus [[complex]] as the primary cause of hysteria and other neurotic symptoms. Despite this [[change]] in his explanatory model, Freud always r
    78 KB (11,491 words) - 23:08, 20 May 2019
  • .... And it seems that the very designation of Hamlet as an [[obsessional]] [[neurotic]] points in this direction: in contrast to [[hysteria]] which is found thro ...lla mia sorte" from Act I of Rossini's <i>Il barbiere di Siviglia</i>? Its obsessive [[madness]] perfectly renders the fact that he is totally indifferent towar
    63 KB (10,767 words) - 21:37, 27 May 2019
  • ...love and hate for the object could explain the [[particular]] features of obsessive [[thought]] (doubt, [[compulsion]]). In [[Totem]] and Taboo (1912-13a) he a ...]] (1933a). Within the [[oedipal]] conflict ambivalence is resolved as a [[neurotic]] [[symptom]], either through a reaction [[formation]] or through [[displac
    6 KB (755 words) - 18:05, 27 May 2019
  • ...arly orderly and describes himself to me as an "absolute [[obsessional]] [[neurotic]]" about things, [[meaning]] there is "absolutely no chaos, everything is a ...Shute but not "[[Agatha Christie]] crap". This he matched with an equally obsessive consumption of movies with a marked preference for popular genres -the [[in
    45 KB (7,481 words) - 23:15, 23 May 2019
  • ...[[Judith]] [[Butler]]. When not mediated by the printed page, however, the obsessive-compulsive quality that makes his hyperkinetic prose so exhilarating is som ...rt blond hair, Salecl is as calm an d deliberate as Zizek is nervous and [[neurotic]]. Zizek, who claims he [[lacks]] the social graces to attend cocktail part
    35 KB (5,651 words) - 23:13, 27 May 2019
  • ...erm itself appeared for the [[first time]] in Sigmund [[Freud]]'s article "Obsessive Actions and [[Religious]] Practices" (1907b). "We may say that the sufferer ...n sharp contrast, believe that the [[denial]] of guilt is central to all [[neurotic]] conflict, and that guilt itself is due to aggressive [[fantasies]] agains
    11 KB (1,649 words) - 23:06, 24 May 2019
  • ...taboo through its comparison with the compulsive [[prohibition]] of the [[neurotic]]. Taboo is a very [[primitive]] prohibition imposed from without (by an [[ ...ions, [[defence]] reactions, and purifications. The most com­mon of these obsessive acts is washing with water (washing [[obsession]]). A part of the taboo pro
    18 KB (2,676 words) - 00:21, 21 May 2019
  • ...ion]] within the compulsions of reparation and restitution associated with obsessive [[behavior]]. # ——. (1979). A [[particular]] form of [[neurotic]] [[resistance]] against the psycho-analytic method. (pp. 303-311) In Selec
    5 KB (748 words) - 08:35, 24 May 2019
  • ...r that results from impulses originating in the id). It is the unconscious neurotic anxiety that most intrigued Freud and formed the basis for his research. Ps ...ant Freudian [[processes]], and it is the basis for other ego defenses and neurotic disorders. It is a means of defense through which threatening or painful th
    32 KB (4,984 words) - 23:10, 20 May 2019
  • ...ys a different [[role]], and it is also capable of becoming dominant in an obsessive structure, just as protest or the [[demand]] for vindication can be permane The typical [[stability]] of [[neurotic]], [[psychotic]], or [[perverse]] [[structures]] contrasts with the uncerta
    3 KB (439 words) - 21:32, 20 May 2019
  • Freud contrasted the obsessive "memory [[image]]," or "mnemic image," with the supposedly genuine memory a * [[Neurotic defenses]]
    11 KB (1,542 words) - 19:23, 20 May 2019
  • Vol. 10\Little Hans\Obsessive Neurosis\Phobias\Two Case Studies\[[Rat Man]]\ Anxiety [[Hysteria]]\ ...]] and the normal, and that many people constantly pass between normal and neurotic states.
    25 KB (4,148 words) - 01:08, 26 May 2019
  • ...[Neuroses]] include [[anxiety]] disorders, "hysteria," "neurasthenia," and obsessive-compulsive disorders. ..."psychodynamic" theory). Originally a method of treating [[people]] with [[neurotic]] disorders invented and made popular by Sigmund Freud. Also a general meth
    8 KB (1,065 words) - 00:25, 21 May 2019
  • ...ssion of which hysterical conversion was the paradigm; in the emergence of obsessive [[ideas]] as in [[obsessional]] [[neurosis]] (in which case secondary sympt ...between affect and idea. The simplest instance of this in the context of [[neurotic]] repression was doubtless displacement, which was a function of the instin
    12 KB (1,683 words) - 00:16, 21 May 2019
  • [[Neurotic]] defenses are procedures developed by the ego which can be considered dama ...defenses) came to be considered the essential first line of defense of the obsessive (or [[phobic]]) [[subject]].
    5 KB (689 words) - 23:14, 23 May 2019
  • ...c [[formations]], including not only [[symptoms]], be they [[hysterical]], obsessive, or [[phobic]], but also [[dreams]], [[parapraxes]], and slips, may appear ...environment]], it still seems important to distinguish clearly between a [[neurotic]] kind of desexualization characterized by repression of the sexual impulse
    8 KB (1,166 words) - 21:25, 27 May 2019
  • ...erm itself appeared for the [[first time]] in Sigmund [[Freud]]'s article "Obsessive Actions and [[Religious]] Practices" (1907b). "We may say that the sufferer ...n sharp contrast, believe that the [[denial]] of guilt is central to all [[neurotic]] conflict, and that guilt itself is due to aggressive [[fantasies]] agains
    7 KB (993 words) - 02:58, 21 May 2019
  • ...] played an [[active]] [[role]] predisposed [[The Subject|the subject]] to obsessive neurosis. This theory was soon abandoned in favor of a [[chronological]] ap ...ctives. The first, inspired by behaviorism, questions the principle of a [[neurotic]] structure and focuses instead on the mechanisms of conditioning that expl
    11 KB (1,607 words) - 20:14, 27 May 2019