Self-Preservation at the Centre of Personality

Self-Preservation at the Centre of Personality

Author: Ralf-Peter Behrendt

Publisher: Vernon Press

Published: 2020-10-06

Total Pages: 183

ISBN-13: 1622739949

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The book discusses personality as a unified set of evolved and culturally developed structures that serves a single and definable purpose, to maintain the individual’s safety, in the context of dyadic relationships, group processes and more abstract and fluid social configurations. The infant-mother relationship remains the blueprint for modes of relating to the social surround, at whatever level of complexity, and for approximating the sense of safety originally provided by the mother. The personality is organized around the need to maintain self-esteem, thereby preserving the individual’s sense of safety and warding off deep-seated paranoid anxiety, which signals the potential of annihilation of the self. Paranoid anxiety is the counterpart of intraspecific aggression and the potential of the group as a whole to attack and annihilate the individual. Paranoid anxiety, which was recognized by Melanie Klein as playing a critical role in infant development, is not overcome as development proceeds but remains latent, buried under layers of personality organization that are essentially concerned with sourcing recognition and approval from the social environment, thereby inhibiting others’ aggression and guarding against annihilation of the self. The book adds to self psychology (Kohut) by showing how the principle of self-preservation underpins all aspects of normal and abnormal character dynamics. It integrates self psychology with other branches psychoanalytic theory and revives the link between psychoanalysis and ethology. Ethology (Lorenz, Hass, Eibl-Eibesfeldt) has provided insights into how interrelated intraspecific aggression and appeasement gestures are critically important for the evolution of social behavior in higher animals as well as for cultural evolution in humans, insights that allow, more generally, for a bridging of the gap between psychoanalysis and the biology of social behavior. Furthermore, an evolutionary approach to character dynamics and related social phenomena will have important implications for understanding psychopathological vulnerabilities and self-perpetuating processes in mental illness.


The Superego

The Superego

Author: Priscilla Roth

Publisher: Totem Books

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781840462463

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Explores the ways in which the superego can manifest itself in familiar everyday incidents, and reveals how feelings and behavior are affected by it. Using case material from psychoanalysis and psychotherapy, the author demonstrates what kinds of experiences may lie behind the hidden, but very powerful, effects superegos have on people.


Sex, Death, and the Superego

Sex, Death, and the Superego

Author: Ronald Britton

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2018-04-17

Total Pages: 229

ISBN-13: 0429918976

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This book is a personal reappraisal of psychoanalytic theories in the light of clinical experience. The first part is about sexuality and begins where psychoanalysis began, with hysteria. The second part is about the ego and the super-ego, the relationship of which dominated Freud's writing from his middle period onwards. The last part is on narcissism and the narcissistic disorders, a major preoccupation of psychoanalysis in the second half of the twentieth century.


Psycho-Analytic Explorations

Psycho-Analytic Explorations

Author: Donald W. Winnicott

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2018-05-08

Total Pages: 380

ISBN-13: 0429917937

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This volume contains ninety-two works by this renowned writer, theoretician, and clinician. Includes critiques of Melanie Klein's ideas and insights into the works of other leading psychoanalysts, and thoughts on such concepts as play in the analytic situation, the fate of the transitional object, regression in psychoanalysis, and the use of silence in psychotherapy.


Narcissism and the Self

Narcissism and the Self

Author: R. Behrendt

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2015-02-03

Total Pages: 407

ISBN-13: 1137491485

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The book examines how coevolved intraspecific aggression and appeasement gestures can give rise to complex social, cultural, and psychopathological phenomena. It argues that the individual's need regulate narcissistic supplies and maintain feelings of safety is the overriding determinant of human conduct and thought in mental health and illness.


The Collected Works of D.W. Winnicott

The Collected Works of D.W. Winnicott

Author: Donald Woods Winnicott

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2017

Total Pages: 625

ISBN-13: 0190271388

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Volume 6 (1960-1963) is introduced with an essay by British adult and child analyst Angela Joyce, current chair of the Winnicott Trust. This volume contains one of Winnicott's most important papers, 'The Theory of the Parent-Infant Relationship', along with papers on aggression, the false self, guilt, adolescence, time in psychoanalytic treatment, the capacity for concern, the value of dependence, fear of breakdown, and communicating and not communicating. It also includes Winnicott's reassessment of Melanie Klein, a discussion of envy in a male patient, and a range of letters to colleagues and others.


Attachment Theory and Psychoanalysis

Attachment Theory and Psychoanalysis

Author: Peter Fonagy

Publisher: Other Press, LLC

Published: 2010-09-07

Total Pages: 268

ISBN-13: 1590514602

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A Bestseller Attachment Theory shows scientifically how our earliest relationships with our mothers influence our later relationships in life. This book offers an excellent introduction to the findings of attachment theory and the major schools of psychoanalytic thought. "The book every student, colleague, and even rival theoretician has been waiting for. With characteristic wit, philosophical sophistication, scholarship, humanity, incisiveness, and creativity, Fonagy succinctly describes the links, differences, and future directions of his twin themes. [His book] is destined to take its place as one of a select list of essential psychology books of the decade." -Jeremy Holmes, Senior Lecturer in Psychotherapy, University of Exeter "Extraordinary--an invaluable resource for developmental psychoanalysis." -Joy D. Osofsky, Professor, Louisiana State University


Psychoanalysis and Ethics

Psychoanalysis and Ethics

Author: Ernest Wallwork

Publisher: Yale University Press

Published: 1991-01-01

Total Pages: 364

ISBN-13: 9780300061673

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Psychoanalysis has had a profound impact on popular morals, for Freud's discoveries have made us aware that unconscious motivations may subvert moral conduct and that moral judgments may be rationalizations of self-interest or expressions of hostility. Freud has, in fact, been called a founder of the "hermeneutics of suspicion" that pervades modern attitudes toward morality. In this book, however, a psychoanalyst who is also a professor of ethics asserts that we do not accurately understand Freud on the various psychological issues relevant to morality and the ethical implications that can be drawn from his views. Ernest Wallwork offers a bold reinterpretation of Freudian theory, showing the ways in which it points toward the possibility of genuine moral behavior. Wallwork provides close textual analyses of Freud's works from a new philosophical perspective, considering such central Freudian doctrines as psychic determinism, the pleasure principle, narcissism, object-love, and defense mechanisms. He demonstrates that, contrary to widespread belief, Freud's views on determinism allow for moral responsibility, his understanding of the pleasure principle and narcissism allows for acting out of concern of others, and his critique of the cultural superego is grounded in an ethic informed by ego rationality. Focusing throughout on Freud's seminal understanding of the self-in-conflict, Wallwork finds and ethical theory suggested by Freud's work that is naturalistic and grounded in a concept of human flourishing and regard for others and concerned with the common good, special relations, and individual rights.


Pre-object Relatedness

Pre-object Relatedness

Author: Ivri Kumin

Publisher: Guilford Press

Published: 1996-01-01

Total Pages: 266

ISBN-13: 9781572300156

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This volume explores the primitive yet complex emotional world of the baby, a preverbal world that predates memory, symbolic representation, self-reflection, and verbal description. Author Ivri Kumin describes the impact of early relational experiences on the foundation of emotional living, when traumatic developmental interferences can disrupt the infant's emerging capacity for representational thought. Using detailed clinical examples, he explains how these early experiences are enacted within the psychoanalytic situation and how their analysis and mediation enable the patient to think about and emotionally encompass these states for the first time. Synthesizing empirical findings with theoretical and clinical information, this volume is invaluable for psychoanalysts and psychodynamic therapists. It is an ideal text for graduate-level courses in psychoanalytic theory and technique, attachment theory, human development, and psychotherapy of early traumatic states.