Sentences with phrase «used freudian»

Since young children are not capable of some of the more commonly used Freudian techniques such as free association, Klein began to utilize play therapy as a way to investigate children's unconscious feelings, anxieties, and experiences.
Someone might use some Freudian aspects, but those that call themselves «psychotherapists» that use Freudian approaches are not the best bang for your buck.
Using Freudian methods of free association, their poetry and prose drew upon the private world of the mind, traditionally restricted by reason and societal limitations, to produce surprising, unexpected imagery.

Not exact matches

Her humor reveals itself in her anecdotes and punch lines, and in the turns of phrase she used to berate a friend's slip into Freudian terminology or answer a professor of English who asked what she considered unreasonable questions.
In a self - destructive spasm of what we used to call Freudian projection, Michael Sean Winters claims that Archbishop Charles Chaput ought to apologize for and withdraw the remarks he made a week ago, in answering a question after his Erasmus Lecture, about the recent synod in Rome....
Freudian Fraud: The Malignant Effect of Freud's Theory on American Thought and Culture by E. Fuller Torrey, M.D. HarperCollins, 362 pages, $ 25 This book has its flaws, especially with regard to Freudian thought, but its contributions to our understanding of how Freudian concepts were used to....
and if you choose to use psychology, why stick to the pervasive, anti-religous freudian branch, and not adler or jung?
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.
There's Freudian humour at work in Abel Ferrara's exploitation banger as all but Thena's first victim are dispatched using that classic phallus substitute for inadequates, the titular.45.
Compare symbols with those used in Freudian or Jungian analysis.
In 2010 art historian Jean - Pierre Criqui wrote about Fritsch's depictions of animals: «The way the artist uses them, but also the situations in which she places them, gives them ambiguous powers at the intersection of several tendencies: humanity's ancestral fears and superstitions, as expressed, for example, in tales and legends; the intensities of totemic thought and of its images; and the uncanny and Freudian dream study.»
He believed that art could convey profound messages without using the complicated visual games of Cubism or the dense symbolic language of Freudian psychoanalysis.»
BioPerversity at Nicodim Gallery through April 28, 2018 By Shana Nys Dambrot We tend to use anthropomorphized animals as proxies in metaphors and morality plays, fairy tales and Freudian projections, tattoos and illuminated manuscripts.
A recent example, which sounds from here rather like a freudian slip, is the Supreme Courts» ruling in Bedford et al. v. Canada (Attorney General) 2013 SCC 72, which throughout used the traditional derogatory term «prostitution», rather than the «sex trade» used by Cossman in her comment here, http://www.slaw.ca/2013/12/21/a-comment-on-bedford/
Maybe that was a Freudian slip, but if a Supreme Court justice uses a word, it should mean something.
It is now percolating into general culture and I expect that within our generation most people will be using fluently the new language of how the mind «computes attitudes,» or «encodes» social knowledge, or how a «heuristic» might make «evolutionary» or «ecological» sense, and so on, eventually replacing Freudian psychology which dominated 20th century's take on how the mind works.
While these ambiguous and untidy splotches of ink are closely connected to the Freudian psychoanalysis, they are also used in some forms of psychodynamic therapy today.
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