Sentences with phrase «from psychoanalytic»

From a psychoanalytic perspective, it has been assumed that girls generally have a greater need for intimacy towards their mothers and are more inclined to identify with their mothers than boys [72].
Lydia comes from a psychoanalytic background, and was seeking a better way to help patients suffering from Personality Disorders.
There were drawn from psychoanalytic therapies, Gestalt, Family Systems Theory, Transactional Analysis, Rational Emotive Therapy and the concepts of Erik Erikson and Carl Rogers.
From the psychoanalytic point of view, the therapeutic process is a dynamic interaction between the subject and the therapist, in contrast with the aforementioned intangible elements that must be processed and internalized.
His work represented a significant move away from the psychoanalytic focus on the inner world as he developed a theory to explain behaviour which took account of external events.
From a psychoanalytic purist's position, there are two important concerns which, unaddressed, would constitute possible misuse of psychoanalytical concepts:
Several different approaches to brief psychodynamic psychotherapy have evolved from psychoanalytic theory and have been clinically applied to a wide range of psychological disorders.
«Scopophilia,» a term borrowed from the psychoanalytic set to denote a desire rooted in observation, is a fitting title for an exhibition by an artist well known for her voyeuristic proclivities: Nan Goldin's latest show is a penetrating, self - critical look at a career spent depicting others.
While my strengths lie in working from a psychoanalytic perspective, I have unique training in complementary and alternative medicine for mental health, feminist theory in counseling, and behavioral medicine.
The healing and growth insights that are available from the psychoanalytic understanding of psychosexual development through adolescence, particularly as these insights have been extended by Erik Erikson and corrected by feminist psychologists, offer valuable conceptual tools for understanding and facilitating human growth.
Using insight mined from psychoanalytic theory, Dykstra likens the biblical text to a transitional object that offers «intimacy without invasion and individuality without isolation.»

Not exact matches

It was one of the reasons for the bitter public feud and name - calling between Alfred Adler (the prominent behavioral psychologist who helped popularize the theory) and his erstwhile colleague and friend Sigmund Freud (who resented Adler for moving away from a neural - based psychoanalytic approach and toward an individual, context - based psychology).
Here the term «psycho - synthetic» is clearly used in conscious contrast with «psychoanalytic» to suggest the procedure from wholeness as contrasted with the procedure from isolated parts and complexes.
The basic psychoanalytic aim — to provide opportunities to complete in a healthier relationship the unfinished growth tasks from the past which continue to distort the present — is still viable and important.
From both the psychoanalytic and the growth perspective, the inner stranger is a potential ally and friend.
Quoted from Phyllis Greenacre in Karl Menninger, The Theory of Psychoanalytic Technique (New York: Basic Books, 1962, p. 78; London: Hogarth Press, 1958).
It appears in heavily secularized garb in various therapeutic cults, most of them offshoots of movements within the psychoanalytic camp — from Wilhelm Reich to the more sedate branches of the «new sensitivity.»
A variety of therapeutic approaches — from Ludwig Binswanger's psychoanalytic approach to Viktor Frankl's neo-Adlerian methodology — have been associated with the existentialist position in philosophy.
Incidentally, not only does the imagery of arising out of nothing and returning to nothing make its appearance in the Kabbalism of Isaac Luria, and I suspect in Melville, but also in the psychoanalytic insights of Sigmund Freud, especially in Beyond the Pleasure Principle, in which Freud sees life as a struggle between the desire to maintain individual identity and the desire to return to the source from whence we have come.
I felt re-energized and hopeful in ongoing efforts to, in my colleague's words «move the mountain of ADHD,» when I received an invitation to speak at an international child psychiatry conference on a panel with a working title: «The ADHD Diagnosis: a Deconstruction from Developmental, Psychoanalytic, Infant Mental Health and Neuropsychiatric Perspectives.»
Harvard neurobiologist J. Allan Hobson used recordings of brain activity from sleeping people to gleefully trash psychoanalytic dream theory, and by implication, the central Freudian ideas of censorship and repression.
While the casting of Crispin Glover as a disassociated loner who discovers he has the power to talk to rats is sort of inspired, «X Files» expat writer Glen Morgan's Willard suffers (and yes, I feel silly for saying this) from a lack of character development, a forced psychoanalytic structure, and a sort of inbred Comic Book Guy fondness for self - reference (i.e., the majority of the bit characters have animal names — a sort of thing used best in Landis's An American Werewolf in London and Dante's The Howling: Mrs. Leach, Mr. Garter, Janice Mantis, George Boxer, and so on) that grates.
Following director Sophie Fiennes» 2006 «The Pervert's Guide to Cinema,» this sequel involves Zizek in various costumes from famous films while discussing psychoanalytic theory, digging into the profound ideas about society and the human condition as far reaching as «The Searchers» and «Taxi Driver.»
In this excerpt from Phaidon's Mary Kelly monograph, Kelly speaks to renown art historian and AIDS scholar Douglas Crimp (who curated the first Pictures exhibition that introduced appropriation artists like Sherrie Levine and spearheaded postmodern art theory) on how she sees her work in relation to feminism (s) and why the later conceptual or «theoretical» feminism's turn to the psychoanalytic subject is always political.
From the late 1960s through the 1970s she created a series of unconventional artworks in parallel to a lengthy psychoanalytic therapy, leading her to develop a series of therapeutic propositions grounded in art.
The voyeuristic and psychoanalytic themes create instant reactions from viewers.
Lavin received a Ph.D. from Columbia University and published her first books, Quatremère de Quincy and the Invention of a Modern Language of Architecture and Form Follows Libido: Architecture and Richard Neutra in a Psychoanalytic Culture, in 1992 and 2005.
Peggy Phelan is among the best - known contemporary feminist theorists, with a particular focus on contemporary visual arts and performance from feminist psychoanalytic perspectives.
Informed by a broad range of subject matter from anthropological studies of pre-language mark making by humans, 20th century art history, and Melanie Klein's psychoanalytic theory of object relation, Black's central concern is to immerse herself in the seemingly inexplicable compulsion to make art.
Each of these large paintings is an excavation site of sorts, archaeological and psychoanalytic, where the art - historical archive bubbles up from the realm of the unconscious through the painter's eyes.
That book became the subject of Freud's psychoanalytic essay Delusion and Dream in Jensen's Gradiva (1907), which in turn obsessed a long line of Surrealists and their kin — from Dalí (who nicknamed his wife after her), to Breton (who named a gallery after her) to Duchamp (whose erotic objects honored her) to Masson, Barthes, Derrida, and Robbe - Grillet.
The title of the exhibition not only refers to the term transference in a psychoanalytic context with its meaning of a trauma transferred from patient to analyst, but serves as an analogy to the changing connotations of forms seen within different contexts.
The psychoanalytic technique of free association propels him from one idea, emotion or thought to another until you feel that a window has opened onto the mind of a man half - crazed with anxiety.
Imago is a psychoanalytic term designating an idealized or imaginary figure from childhood which the child comes to use as a behavioral model later in life.
Marlene Steyn's work takes shape in the unsettling of established ideas surrounding themes of psychoanalytic theory, historical narratives of art and popular signifiers borrowed from contemporary culture.
Her experience as a clinical psychologist practicing psychotherapy from a contemporary psychoanalytic perspective for over 25 years reflects an enduring passion and respect for personal idiosyncrasy that characterizes her early portrait work, the more recent and abstract, life - size human figure paintings, and now, her turn to the reservoir of personal experience within.
Also presented are works from his other ongoing projects, Journal of Evidence Weekly and Game Pieces, giving context to the organic evolution of his psychoanalytic drawing practice.
Still, I was intrigued earlier this month when I heard from Renee Lertzman, a research fellow in humanities and sustainability at Portland State University, that she was speaking on «the myth of apathy,» the subject of a book she's writing, at «Engaging With Climate Change: Psychoanalytic Perspectives,» a meeting of psychoanalysts and behavioral researchers in London.
May 6 - «From the Law Firm to the Couch: What Drives Lawyers to Therapy,» Kansas City Association for Psychoanalytic Psychology, Kansas City, MO (helping psychotherapists better understand the work environment and pressures facing their lawyer patients).
She also received a certificate in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy from the Wright Institute of Los Angeles.
The scientific story has developed from attachment as care - giving and protective (or the opposite: deprivation, inadequacy, or insecure), to how attachment may influence an individual's sense of themselves, their part in relationships, and their capacity to problem - solve and look after themselves — attachment styles, described as «inner working models» in the psychoanalytic literature which may persist into adult life (as secure, anxious, avoidant, or disorganised).
He received a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology and a Master's degree in Theology from Fuller Graduate School of Psychology, as well as a certificate in Psychodynamic Psychotherapy from the Southern California Psychoanalytic Institute.
I work largely from the perspective of intersubjective psychoanalytic theory and object relations theory.
The theoretical model outlined above stems directly from Attachment Theory, called in oldspeak, conflict resolution, psychoanalytic hydraulic pressure from sexuality, faulty conditioning by the behavioral - cognitive therapists, genetic predisposition from the biology folks, or the Existential belief in the absurd.
Some of the dimensions reflected aspects of family functioning that were particularly emphasised by structural, psychoanalytic and other types of family therapy, where a therapists from one of these might consider the account of certain dimensions was incomplete or inadequate.
No small wonder then, when John Bowlby a psychiatrist himself, formulated attachment theory (Bowlby, 1969 / 1982) which he saw as an attempt to better understand human development and that recognized concepts from both models, that he was immediately ostracized by the psychoanalytic community.
CBT - E was superior to long - term psychoanalytic psychotherapy with regard to abstinence from binge eating and purging at 5 months (ie, at the conclusion of CBTE - E and 5 months into long - term psychoanalytic psychotherapy) and 24 months (ie, at the conclusion of long - term psychoanalytic psychotherapy and 19 months after the conclusion of CBT - E) after the onset of treatment.
The first is that nihilistic prognoses for borderline personality disorder are not evidence based, 2 psychoanalytic day hospital treatment and cognitive behavioural treatment3 have support from randomised controlled trials, and therapeutic communities have systematic review support.4 Nihilism may have arisen because treatment needs commitment, a clear model, time to influence behaviours, and a longer time to affect depression.
I specialize in psychoanalytic psychotherapy with adults who struggle with shame, depression, suicidality, divorce, anger, anxiety, isolation, or estrangment from family members.
He graduated from The Catholic University of America with a Master's degree in Social Work and the Institute for Clinical Social Work with a doctorate focusing on psychoanalytic psychotherapy and psychotherapeutic research.
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