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Personality Structure and Human Interaction: The Developing Synthesis of Psychodynamic Theory [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 456 pages, height x width: 230x147 mm, weight: 453 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Dec-1977
  • Izdevniecība: Karnac Books
  • ISBN-10: 1855751186
  • ISBN-13: 9781855751187
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  • Cena: 66,41 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 456 pages, height x width: 230x147 mm, weight: 453 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Dec-1977
  • Izdevniecība: Karnac Books
  • ISBN-10: 1855751186
  • ISBN-13: 9781855751187
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
How has a theory of man as a social being to be formulated if we are to do justice to his individuality, to the subtle ways in which his love and hate compete within his relations with others and to the anxieties and resistances he shows when he seeks to change himself? To answer this question is the task which the author sets himself. After assessing Freud's basic principles, Guntrip proceeds to make a uniquely comprehensive review of subsequent theoretical contributions to psychoanalysis with special emphasis on the work of Fairbairn and Melanie Klein.From a background of philosophy, theology and social studies, Dr. Guntrip went on to take a personal psychoanalysis and to become a full time psychotherapist, and it is from this combination of wide knowledge and intensive work with people beset by conflicts in their relations with themselves and others that he evolves his views. After assessing Freud's basic principles, he proceeds to make a uniquely comprehensive review of subsequent theoretical contributions to psychoanalysis with special emphasis on the work of Fairbairn and Melanie Klein, as it is in their writings that he considers the most needed developments have been made, namely, the placing of the theory of personality squarely in the realm of human interaction. In the first part of Dr. Guntrip's book all students of personality will find an arresting survey of the development of psychoanalytic thought; in the latter they will meet highly stimulating and profound views on the origins and nature of the conflicting forces in human relationships. In particular he traces the progress of research beyond the problems of guilt and depression to the deeper and graver problems of the inadequate and Schizoid personality; thus finding the causes of mental ill health not in he secondary conflicts over sex and aggression, but in the primary problem of fear, and the struggle to cope with the frightened and helpless child in the depths of the unconscious.

Recenzijas

How has a theory of man as a social being to be formulated if we are to do justice to his individuality, to the subtle ways in which his love and hate compete within his relations with others and to the anxieties and resistances he shows when he seeks to change himself? To answer this question is the task which the author sets himself.From a background of philosophy, theology and social studies, he went on to take a personal psychoanalysis and to become a full time psychotherapist, and it is from this combination of wide knowledge and intensive work with people beset by conflicts in their relations with themselves and others that Dr. Guntrip evolves his views. After assessing Freud's basic principles he proceeds to make a uniquely comprehensive review of subsequent theoretical contributions to psychoanalysis with special emphasis on the work of Fairbairn and Melanie Klein, as it is in their writings that he considers the most needed developments have been made, namely, the placing of the theory of personality squarely in the realm of human interaction. In the first part of Dr.Guntrip's book all students of personality will find an arresting survey of the development of psychoanalytic thought; in the latter they will meet highly stimulating and profound views on the origins and nature of the conflicting forces in human relationships. In particular he traces the progress of research beyond the problems of guilt and depression to the deeper and graver problems of the inadequate and Schizoid personality; thus finding the causes of mental ill health not in he secondary conflicts over sex and aggression, but in the primary problem of fear, and the struggle to cope with the frightened and helpless child in the depths of the unconscious.

Acknowledgements 5(6)
Foreword 11(4)
J. D. Sutherland
Author's Preface 15(10)
PART 1 PRELIMINARIES
Introduction: Practical and Theoretical Purposes
25(3)
Psychology and Psycho-Analysis
28(6)
Psychiatry and Psycho-Analysis
34(9)
The Development of Psycho-Analytical Theory
43(12)
PART 2 THE DEVELOPMENT OF PSYCHO-ANALYTICAL THEORY
Thesis, Dynamic Psychobiology
The Starting-Point. Classic Freudian Psychobiology
55(32)
Introduction
55(3)
Physiology and Psychology
58(7)
Psychobiology, (a) Instincts, (b) Culture, (c) Psychotherapy
65(17)
Criticisms of Freud's Instinct-Theory by the `Culture Pattern' School. (a) Libido, (b) Aggression
82(5)
The Later Freudian Structural Theory and Analysis of the Ego
87(31)
Ego Analysis and Endopsychic Conflict
87(2)
The Development of Freud's Ego-Analysis
89(12)
Later Orthodox Development of Freud's Structural Theory. (a) F. Alexander, (b) W. Reich and Anna Freud, (c) Hartmann, Kris and Loewenstein, (d) Winnicott
101(17)
Process Theory and Personal Theory
118(43)
Freud's Early Terminology
118(2)
The Philosophy of Science
120(5)
Freud's Metapsychology: The Pleasure Principle
125(4)
Freud's Metapsychology: The Death Instinct
129(3)
Freud's Metapsychology: The Reality Principle
132(3)
Freud's Metapsychology and Ego-Analysis
135(7)
Brierley's Process Theory and Personal Theory
142(4)
Recent Discussions, 1955, Colby et al.
146(15)
Antithesis, Dynamic Psychosociology
The `Culture Pattern' Theory and Character Analysis. Adler, Karen Horney, Erich Fromm
161(13)
H. S. Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry
174(18)
A Note on Carl Jung
190(2)
Emerging Synthesis, Psychodynamic Theory of the `Person' and Personal Relationships
The Relation of Melanie Klein's Work to Freud
192(23)
The Early Development of Mrs. Klein's Conceptions
195(12)
The New Emphasis on Aggression
207(8)
The Psychodynamic Theory of Melani Klein
215(19)
Psychic Reality
218(1)
Internal Objects and Psychic Structure
219(3)
Phantasy
222(3)
The Inner World
225(5)
The Super-Ego and the Internal Object World
230(4)
Melanie Klein: Theory of Early Development and `Psychotic' Positions
234(12)
The Depressive and the Paranoid-Schizoid Positions
234(5)
The Primary Unity of the Ego
239(7)
The Relation of Fairbairn's Work to Freud
246(30)
Fairbairn and Freud
246(2)
The Attitudes of Freud and Fairbairn to Science and Religion
248(9)
Fairbairn's Early Writings
257(10)
The `Kleinian' Period
267(9)
Fairbairn. A Complete `Object-Relations' Theory of the Personality. Libido Theory
276(45)
Rejection of Biological Psychology
279(3)
The Schizoid Problem and Object-Relations
282(5)
Theory of Motivation and Developmental Phases
287(7)
Theory of Psychoneurosis
294(3)
Criticisms of Fairbairn's Theory
297(12)
Theory of Psychosis and the Psychopathology of Infantile Dependence
309(9)
Comparison with Rank's `Birth Trauma' Theory
318(3)
Fairbairn. A Complete `Object-Relations' Theory of the Personality. (2) Endopsychic Structure
321(15)
The Pattern of Endopsychic Structure
324(6)
The Analysis of the Super-Ego
330(6)
Melanie Klein and Fairbairn
336(15)
PART 3 CONCLUSIONS
The Basic Forms of Human Relationship
351(29)
Theory and Therapy
380(65)
Biological and Social Dependence of the Child
381(3)
Pathological Dependence
384(2)
Active and Passive Aspects of Infantile Dependence
386(4)
The Characteristics of Pathological Dependence
390(5)
Theory and the Approach to Therapy
395(1)
D. W. Winnicott's Views on Therapeutic Regression
396(17)
Fairbairn'e Views on Object-Relations Theory and Psychotherapy
413(4)
The Final Problem: (a) The Hard Core of Resistance to Psychotherapeutic Change; (b) The Re-orientation of Psychodynamic Theory
417(28)
Bibliography 445(6)
Index 451


Harry Guntrip (1901-1975) was a psychologist known for his major contributions to object relations theory. He was a Fellow of the British Psychological Society and a psychotherapist and lecturer at the Department of Psychiatry, Leeds University, and also a Congregationalist minister. He was described by John D. Sutherland as "one of the psychoanalytic immortals".