Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. On learning from loss: Rereading ‘Mourning and Melancholia’. On 18 March 2020, the Psychoanalysis Unit in collaboration with the Freud Museum was due to mount an exhibition of artworks produced by London University students exploring the theme of melancholia.

  2. 22 de ago. de 2023 · With “Mourning and Melancholia,” Freud, then, explores more fully a relationship he has mentioned in 1897 (in the context of the desire for parental death and the subsequent self-reproach when it occurs), considered more as early as 1910 (in the context of adolescent suicide and secondary schools), and had discussed with Karl ...

    • Ranjana Khanna
    • rkhanna@duke.edu
  3. 24 de jul. de 2008 · This paper draws attention to consistencies between physiological processes identified by modern clinical research and psychological processes described by Freud, with a special emphasis on his famous paper on depression entitled 'Mourning and melancholia'.

    • Robin L Carhart-Harris, Helen S Mayberg, Andrea L Malizia, David Nutt
    • 10.1186/1744-859X-7-9
    • 2008
    • Ann Gen Psychiatry. 2008; 7: 9.
  4. As we have seen, one of the main distinctions between mourning and melancholia is that in melancholia the patient does not yet know what has been lost, and thus the work that is done in mourning in which the libidinal investment in the lost object

  5. 22 de feb. de 2019 · This article concentrates on Freud’s draft of “Mourning and Melancholia,” written in 1915 and published in 1996. After presenting a summary of the main theses of Freud’s draft, Abraham’s and Ferenczi’s reactions to the text are discussed as well as Freud’s response to their comments.

    • Ulrike May
    • 2019
  6. This model informs “Mourning and Melancholia” (1917), in which Freud argued that mourning comes to a decisive end when the subject severs its emotional attachment to the lost one and reinvests the free libido in a new object.

  7. 20 de dic. de 2015 · The two fates of Stransom and “the mourning niece” are but an introduction to Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia ”. Actually, I aim to show that some Freudian and post-Freudian views on these two conditions are best understood in the light of an intentional analysis of loss and bereavement.