Difference between revisions of "Ego-psychology"

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[[Ego-psychology]] is a [[school]] of [[Sigmund Freud|post-Freudian]] [[psychoanalysis]], derived from [[psychology|child psychology]], [[Freud]]'s [[topology|second topography]] and [[Anna Freud]]'s work on the [[ego]] and its [[defence]]s.
 
[[Ego-psychology]] is a [[school]] of [[Sigmund Freud|post-Freudian]] [[psychoanalysis]], derived from [[psychology|child psychology]], [[Freud]]'s [[topology|second topography]] and [[Anna Freud]]'s work on the [[ego]] and its [[defence]]s.
  
It proceeds on the basis of [[Freud]]'s [[structure|structural model]] of the [[mind]], but is specifically concerned with the role of the [[ego]] in mediating between the conflicting [[demand]]s of the [[instinctual]] [[id]], the [[moralistic]] [[superego]] and [[external]] [[reality]].  
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It accepts [[Freud]]'s [[structure|structural model]] of the [[mind]], but is specifically concerned with the role of the [[ego]] in mediating between the conflicting [[demand]]s of the [[instinctual]] [[id]], the [[moralistic]] [[superego]] and [[external]] [[reality]].  
  
 
[[Anna Freud]]'s book ''[[The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defence]]'' (1936) was one of the first works to focus almost entirely on the [[ego]].
 
[[Anna Freud]]'s book ''[[The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defence]]'' (1936) was one of the first works to focus almost entirely on the [[ego]].

Revision as of 07:59, 15 September 2006

French: psychologie du moi

Ego-psychology is a school of post-Freudian psychoanalysis, derived from child psychology, Freud's second topography and Anna Freud's work on the ego and its defences.

It accepts Freud's structural model of the mind, but is specifically concerned with the role of the ego in mediating between the conflicting demands of the instinctual id, the moralistic superego and external reality.

Anna Freud's book The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defence (1936) was one of the first works to focus almost entirely on the ego.

Heinz Hartmann argued that the

Ego-psychology holds that the ego has autonomous energy and functions independently.


The principal theorists of ego-psychology are Heinz Hartmann, Rudolf Loewenstein and Ernst Kris; its main journal is the American-based Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, published since 1945.

Lacan's analyst, Rudolph Loewenstein, was one of ego-psychology's founding fathers. 


History of Ego-Psychology

and the trend became firmly established in Heinz Hartmann's Ego Psychology and the Problem of Adaptation (1939), which is now regarded as the foundational text of ego-psychology.

Ego-psychology was taken to the United States by the Austrian analysts who emigrated there in the late 1930s, and since the early 1950s it has been the dominant school of psychoanalysis not only in the United States but also in the whole of the IPA.

This position of dominance has enabled ego-psychology to present itself as the inheritor of Freudian psychoanalysis in its purist form, when in fact there are radical differences between some of its tenets and Freud's work.

The dominance


Jacques Lacan's Criticism

Lacan's




For much of his professional life, Lacan disputed ego-psychology's claim to be the true heir to the Freudian legacy


After Lacan was expelled from the IPA in 1953, he was free to voice his criticisms of ego-psychology openly, and during the rest of his life he developed a sustained and powerful critique.

Much of Lacanian theory cannot be properly understood without reference to the ideas of ego-psychology with which Lacan contrasts it.

Lacan challenged all the central concepts of ego-psychology, such as the concepts of adaptation and the autonomous ego.

His criticisms of ego-psychology are often intertwined with his criticisms of the IPA which was dominated by this particular school of thought.

Lacan presents both ego-psychology and the IPA as the "antithesis" of true psychoanalysis.[1]

Lacan argues that both were irremediably corrupted by the culture of the United States (see factor c).

Lacan's powerful critique has meant that few people now accept uncritically the claims of ego-psychology to identify itself as "classical psychoanalysis."

See Also

References

  1. Lacan, Jacques. Écrits: A Selection. Trans. Alan Sheridan. London: Tavistock Publications, 1977. p.l16


Index