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The Life-Death Intinct/ Feelng Through Creative- Clinical Moments Neil Maizels english

By: Maizels NeilMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Lomdon & New York Routledge Taylor and Francis Group 2024 Description: vi, 252 p. ; soft bound 15.5x23.5 cmISBN: 978-1-03-242892-5DDC classification: 150
Contents:
1. Inoculative identification in Alfred Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train 2.Self-envy, the womb and the nature of goodness – a reappraisal of the death instinct 3. The destructive confounding of intra-uterine and post-uterine feeding as a factor against emotional growth 4. What could be better than nuclear warfare?: An essay on the quest for eirenarchic survival 5. Dreams Grown False: The ‘"cannibalization"’ of alpha function 6. The role of Disidentification in the growth of personality and during the analytic termination phase 7. Working through, or beyond the depressive position? Achievements and defences of a Spiritual position 8. ""I'm Miss Red!"" Reworking a premature weaning in a lonely young girl 9. Loneliness and its amelioration through transformations of the Internal Father 10. Two Vices and a film review i Sometimes a cigar ... on smokers and non-smokers ii The significance of Swearing as a proto-language iii Life and Death of a Planet in Melancholia – a film about depressive cynicism 11 The wrecking and re-pairing of the internal couple: in clinical work and in Shakespeare’s Othello and The Winter's Tale 12 Trees of knowledge in Thomas Hardy’s The Woodlanders 13 Distraction – as both an important manic defense, and yet also as a creative unconscious consolation when facing immense depressive or disintegrative states 14 Narcissus Rejects: Unbearable Beauty and the urge to destroy it, in The Comfort of Strangers 15 Inconclusive Conclusion: The resilient persistence of the life-death instinct through variations in its relationships with the drive to death
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Tetso College Library
Psychology
Non-fiction 150 MAI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 13700

1. Inoculative identification in Alfred Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train 2.Self-envy, the womb and the nature of goodness – a reappraisal of the death instinct 3. The destructive confounding of intra-uterine and post-uterine feeding as a factor against emotional growth 4. What could be better than nuclear warfare?: An essay on the quest for eirenarchic survival 5. Dreams Grown False: The ‘"cannibalization"’ of alpha function 6. The role of Disidentification in the growth of personality and during the analytic termination phase 7. Working through, or beyond the depressive position? Achievements and defences of a Spiritual position 8. ""I'm Miss Red!"" Reworking a premature weaning in a lonely young girl 9. Loneliness and its amelioration through transformations of the Internal Father 10. Two Vices and a film review i Sometimes a cigar ... on smokers and non-smokers ii The significance of Swearing as a proto-language iii Life and Death of a Planet in Melancholia – a film about depressive cynicism 11 The wrecking and re-pairing of the internal couple: in clinical work and in Shakespeare’s Othello and The Winter's Tale 12 Trees of knowledge in Thomas Hardy’s The Woodlanders 13 Distraction – as both an important manic defense, and yet also as a creative unconscious consolation when facing immense depressive or disintegrative states 14 Narcissus Rejects: Unbearable Beauty and the urge to destroy it, in The Comfort of Strangers 15 Inconclusive Conclusion: The resilient persistence of the life-death instinct through variations in its relationships with the drive to death

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