Psychoanalysis Listening to Love: Passion and BondsRoutledge, 2018 M04 19 - 254 páginas This book is about love, about how we fall in love and why we fall in love, and about how much we suffer if unable to love or be loved. The need to love and be loved can be read as the prototype of every human need and every relationship between human beings. To be loved is wishing to be seen, known, recognised for what we are in our deepest and most hidden inner self, in our wildest desires to live and be free. It is a need for knowledge, gratefulness and recognition. Literature, cinema and our very experience of life tell us about it. By listening to love, can psychoanalysis add anything further and new to what has already been said by culture, art and by our life experiences? In psychoanalysis, the events of love can be understood by going back to the most primitive forms of human relationships, that is, to the earliest childhood experiences. |
Contenido
CHAPTER | |
CHAPTER | |
CHAPTER THREE | |
CHAPTER FOUR | |
CHAPTER FIVE | |
CHAPTER | |
CHAPTER SEVEN | |
CHAPTER EIGHT | |
CHAPTER NINE | |
CHAPTER | |
CHAPTER ELEVEN | |
CHAPTER TWELVE | |
CONCLUSIONS | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Psychoanalysis Listening to Love: Passion and Bonds Simonetta Diena Sin vista previa disponible - 2017 |
Términos y frases comunes
absolutely Alessandra Alice allowed analysis analytic setting Antonella anxiety aspects Balint beautiful become Bion Bion’s capacity castration anxiety chapter child childhood cinema clinical countertransference death describes desire Diena dream Effi Briest elements Elisabetta Emma emotional episode everything experience Fatal love father fear feel film Francesco Freud Gianmarco Giovanni homosexual husband idealisation illusion infantile International Journal Jeanne Moreau Journal of Psycho-Analysis Kernberg Kim Ki-Duk libidinal listening live London lost Louis Malle love investment love object love relationship love story lovers Madame Bovary meaning memories mind mirror mother narcissistic narrative never normal oedipal one’s original passion past patient persecutory person phantasies pleasure possible present projective identification psychic reality psychoanalytic realised repeated repetition representation represents Sandro Penna seems session sexual shared situation suffering symbolic talk Tannhäuser thought transference love transformation Translated traumatic unconscious understand Winnicott woman words