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作者: (奥)西格蒙德·弗洛伊德(Sigmund Freud)著;姜春香译
出版社:时代文艺出版社,2011
简介: 《梦的解析》又叫《释梦》,是西格蒙德?弗洛伊德的开创性的著作, 心理学著作中的不朽经典,该书被作者本人描述为“理解潜意识心理过程的 捷径”。 《梦的解析》与达尔文的《物种起源》和哥白尼的《天体运行论》并被 为导致人类三大思想革命的经典之作,自问世以来,历经一个多世纪而长销 不衰。
Studies in Hysteria 9780141184821
作者: Sigmund Freud 著
出版社:Penguin 2004年3月
简介:The tormenting of the body by the troubled mind, hysteria isamong the most pervasive of human disorders - yet at the same timeit is the most elusive. Freud's recognition that hysteria stemmedfrom traumas in the patient's past transformed the way we thinkabout sexuality. "Studies in Hysteria" is one of the founding textsof psychoanalysis, revolutionizing our understanding of love,desire and the human psyche.
作者: 荆成义编著
出版社:辽宁美术出版社,2013
简介:《画坛巨匠:弗洛伊德素描》内容简介:弗洛伊德于1922年出生于德国柏林,父亲恩斯特·路德维希·弗洛伊德是奥地利犹太人,一位建筑师,母亲露西·布拉希是德国人。他是著名心理学家西格蒙德·弗洛伊德(sigmund Freud)的孙子,他的兄弟是作家、政治家克莱门特·弗洛伊德。1933年,为了躲避纳粹,他随家人搬到英国,成为英国公民。1939年,他曾就读于德文郡的达廷顿霍尔学校,后来就读于布赖安斯顿学校。
作者: 田永胜著
出版社:河北大学出版社,1998
简介: 本书是“西方大师思想精华丛书”之一,它记载了弗洛伊德关于思想成因与生命历程、潜意识理论及其发展、社会文化论。另外,本书还有两个附录:一,弗洛伊德生平简表;二,弗洛伊德主要著述。
Freud’s readings of the unconsicous and arts
出版社:中国人民大学出版社,1998
简介: 本文全文共有七章,标题分别为:对无意识概念的辩护;无意识的诸种含义:一种地形学的观点;无意识情绪;地形学与压抑的动力;无意识系统的特征;两种系统之间的交流;对无意识的识别。这里我们编了其中的四章。弗洛伊德说,在精神分析理论中,我们总是毫不犹豫地断言:心理事件经历的过程是受唯乐原则自动调节的。也就是说,我们相信,这些心理事件的过程所以会发生,必定是由某种自我的非理性冲动。
简介:Twentieth Century Literature is a major anthology of key representative works by fifty leading modern literary critics writing before the structuralist revolution. It is a companion volume to Modern Criticism and Theory (Longman 1988), also edited by David Lodge, which anthologises contemporary criticism as it has developed through structuralism and post-structuralist theory. Together these volumes provide the most comprehensive survey available of traditional and radical literary theory in action. The critics collected together in this volume have been drawn from England, America and Europe, and each essay has been prefaced by an editor's introduction which suggests the historical and methodological significance of the piece and gives bibliographical and biographical information. This writers collected are: M. H. Abrams, W. B. Yeats, Sigmund Freud,Henry James, Ezra Pound, T. S Eliot, Virginia Woolf, T.E. Hulme, I. A. Richards, D. H. Lawrence, E. M. Forster, William Empson, G. Wilson Hight, C. G. Jung, Maud Bodkin, Christopher Caudwell, L. C. Knights, John Crowe Ransom, Edmund Wilson, Paul Val茅ry, D. W. Harding, Lionel Trilling, Cleanth Brooks, Yvor Wiinters, Erich Auerbach, W. K. Wimsatt and Monroe C. Beardsley, George Orwell, Jean-Paul Sartre, Mark Schorer, Francis Fergusson, Northrop Frye, C. S. Lewis, Leslie Fielder, Alain Robbe-Grillet, George Luk谩cs, Richard Hoggart, Walter J. Ong, Norman O. Brown, Ian Watt, Claude L茅vi-Strauss, Ren茅 Welleck, Wayne Booth, Raymond Williams, R. S. Crane, Marshall McLuhan, George Steiner, Susan Sontag, W. H. Auden, Frank Kermode.
作者: (英)迈克尔·雅各布斯(Michael Jacobs)著;于而彦译
出版社:学林出版社,2007
简介:本书是20世纪心理治疗大师系列丛书之一。弗洛伊德的贡献在于:他是一位真正的思想开拓者——当代谈话心理治疗的伟大开拓者和先驱者。 如果尝试去梳理当代各种心理疗法的历史发展叙事,你几乎都可以追溯到精神分析。例如艾利斯的理情行为疗法、贝克的认知行为疗法、罗杰斯的以来访者为中心疗法、皮尔斯的格式塔疗法有精神分析的基础。 弗洛伊德是二十世纪最受推崇的心理学大师,他的精神分析理论及其他许多观念已深入大众文化和意识当中。作者以较宏观的意图,来写此书,先介绍了他的生平,然后是他的重要理论以及这些理论的实际应用和影响。 尽管弗洛伊德的理论得到了广泛的承认并应用于实践,但是也受到了不少人的严厉批评,也包括了对他本人个性的批评。 阅读本书,有助于我们全面了解弗洛伊德其人及其成果。
简介: Sigmund Freud's relationship with Otto Rank was the most constant, close, and significant of his professional life. Freud considered Rank to be the most brilliant of his disciples. The two collaborated on psychoanalytic writing, practice, and politics; Rank was the managing director of Freud's publishing house; and after several years helping Freud update his masterpiece, The Interpretation of Dreams, Rank contributed two chapters. His was the only other name ever to be listed on the title page. This complete collection of the known correspondence between the two brings to life their twenty-year collaboration and their painful break. The 250 letters between Freud and Rank compiled by E. James Lieberman and Robert Kramer humanize and dramatize psychoanalytic thinking, practice, and organization from 1906 through 1925. The letters concern not just the work and trenchant contemporaneous observations of the two but also their friendships, supporters, rivals, families, travels, and other details about their personal and professional lives. Most interestingly, the letters trace Rank's growing independence, the father-son schism over Rank's "anti-Oedipal" heresy, their surprising reconciliation, and the moment when the two parted ways permanently. Presenting a candid picture of how the pioneers of modern psychotherapy behaved with their patients, colleagues, and families, the correspondence between Freud and Rank demonstrates how psychoanalysis grew in relation to early twentieth-century science, art, philosophy, and politics. A rich primary source on psychology, history, and culture, The Letters of Sigmund Freud and Otto Rank is a cogent and powerful narrative of the history of early psychoanalysis and its two most important personalities.
Crowd:a study of the popular mind
作者: 古斯塔夫·勒庞(Gustave Le Bon)著;周婷译
出版社:脸谱出版,2011
简介: 流傳百年之久的心理學經典著作 全球近二十種語言版本,累銷上千萬冊! 曾被佛洛伊德譽為「一本當之無愧的名著」 當政治人物一站上台,高聲一呼,為什麼台下就有一群人鼓掌咆哮回應? 為什麼早已作古的阿拉真神在千年之後還能趨使成千上萬的聖戰士為其賣命? 希特勒屠殺猶太人、日本對華的南京大屠殺等等,怎麼有人能做出如此殘忍的暴行? 當景氣大好時,為什麼一個醜聞的爆發,就能讓眾人拋售資產,使經濟頓時陷入危機? …… 【精彩內容】 ◎一股無形的強大能量――群眾心理 上述等等現象都是源自於群眾心理的作用,我們甚至可以從生活中就輕易地觀察到其影響力:許多時候,我們可能自己都沒發覺,一些平常看來不理性的舉動,卻在一群人的默許甚至是鼓吹之下,你就無所畏懼地去做了。 也有些時候,你也許明明覺得一件事物看來很呆板無趣,但因為社會大眾的愛好狂潮,你也不自覺地跟著去搶購、收集。 還有更多時候,你看到股市一片長紅,以為這一票一定能讓你獲利,於是毫不猶豫地投下你的老本,結果慘敗而歸,連退休金都賠光。 由此可見,任何人都應該認識這股在無形中主宰我們的力量,了解群眾心理,不僅能讓你看懂先人的歷史,更能讓你掌握自己的命運。 ◎無意識的「群氓之族」 本書寫成於一個民眾的集體意識初萌芽的年代。 作者勒龐生長的背景是動盪不安的法國大革命時期,因此他對於群眾心理以及群體力量的觀察格外精闢入裡。 勒龐發現:一個群體的運作具備其獨有的特徵,不同於個體單獨的行為模式。 群體在組織化的過程中,每個成員的觀念和想法會漸趨一致,他們自覺的個性會逐漸消失,取而代之的是集體的群眾心理。 當獨立個體受到刺激時,大腦會告訴他不要衝動,但是成為群體一員後,他會覺得自己無所不能。 因此,群眾心理具備了一些被人們視為不理性的特質,諸如:瘋狂、衝動、偏執、盲目、狂熱、易被鼓動等等。 這種現象使得我們在無意間變成了群氓之族,身處在一個群氓時代。 ◎邁向群體智慧的時代 相較於過去的任何一個時點,現在的我們都是處在一個群體更有力量的時代。 當以前的人們還不清楚群眾心理時,或多或少錯用了群體力量。 然而,現在的我們站在巨人的肩膀之上,充分了解群眾心理之後,我們一定能將群體力量導向更好的用途,開創出真正的群體智慧時代。 「當古老的社會之柱一根根傾倒時,群眾力量是唯一一股勢不可擋的能量,且日漸壯大。事實上,我們即將要進入的就是群氓時代。」――勒龐 【專業推薦】 「勒龐的《烏合之眾》是一本當之無愧的名著,它極為精緻地描述了集體心態。」――心理學大師佛洛伊德(Sigmund Freud) 「心理學領域已經出版的著作中,最有影響者,非勒龐的《烏合之眾》莫屬。」――美國社會心理學大師奧爾波特(Gordon Allport) 「勒龐的這本書具有持久的影響力,是群體行為研究者不可不讀的文獻。」――美國社會學大師默頓(Robert Merton)
Leonardo Da Vinci a memory of his childhood
作者: (奥)弗洛伊德(Sigmund Freud)著;张恒译
出版社:新星出版社,2010
简介: 《达·芬奇的童年回忆》是精神分析创始人弗洛伊德对天才达·芬奇的精神解剖之作。对于达·芬奇这位伟大的人物,弗洛伊德将其人与其作品分开。作品尽管伟大,但创作作品的人和常人无异,有正常人的生理和心理上的需要和愿望,他的一生也和常人一样,被这种需要和愿望的早年遭遇所决定。弗洛伊德一直对达·芬奇很感兴趣,1898年,他在给朋友的信中写道:“也许,最著名的‘左撇子’就是达·芬奇了,没人知道他有过什么风流韵事。” 弗洛伊德手拿精神分析的手术刀,对达·芬奇的艺术进行了精确剖析。达·芬奇只是梦见了一只秃鹫,就被弗洛伊德下了他在婴儿时期就已经和母亲乱伦的结论……
简介:
《梦的解析》一书已成为精神分析学说的重要组 成部分和三大理论支柱之一,美国前全国图书馆协会 主席唐斯博士*将这本书列入“改变世界历史面貌” 的十六部巨*之一。
【作者简介】
西格蒙德·弗洛伊德(Sigmund Freud,1856~1939),出生于奥地利摩拉维亚一个犹太人家庭,精神分析学派的创始人,提出了“恋母情结”,“潜意识”、“自我、本我、超我”等概念,被誉为二十世纪*伟大的思想家之一。 精神分析学始终坚持将性(爱)本能视为人类一切行为的主要动机,从上世纪以来就一直在学术界以及社会上颇具争议。因此,弗洛伊德一生毁誉参半,很难评判他在历史上的地位。有人认为他是人类思想史上*杰出的人物之一,也有人将他视为“欺世盗名的江湖骗子”、“变态色情狂”。 2000年,英国BBC将弗洛伊德与爱因斯坦、笛卡尔、牛顿、达尔文、康德、马克思、黑格尔、马克斯韦尔、阿奎那评选为千年来的十大伟人。
作者: 秦海著
出版社:太白文艺出版社,2003
简介:19世纪末,一位奥地利医生比达尔文走得更远,他平静地宣布:在人类的身上存在着歇斯底里本质、俄狄浦斯情结、潜意识和性问题。这更令人惊恐和愤慨。他不像达尔文探讨的是人类的祖先,他将矛头对准了人类自身,他看到了人类灵魂的最深处。这个人就是现代精神分析学说的鼻祖——西格蒙德·弗洛伊德。 在心理学年鉴上,在整个20世纪,他都是最有争议的人物。褒之者誉其为伟大的科学家,学派的创始人。贬之者斥其为“江湖术士”。但无论怎样,他创立的精神分析学说影响了整个20世纪人类的意识形态,不仅是 自然科学(心理学、医学、生理学),而且也渗透到哲学、史学、文学艺术等各个领域。
作者: (奥)安娜·玛丽亚·西格蒙德(Anna Maria Sigmund)著;班玮,曲俊雅译
出版社:北京十月文艺出版社,2004
简介: 二战结束至今,各国媒体对那些接受审判的纳粹“名媛”作了大量报道。而当时许多引起轰动的所谓揭秘材料以及后来大量相关读物,其内容却颇多失实。纳粹当权者的女人们一个个不同寻常、颇富戏剧色彩的人生命运,不但当时的人们被蒙在鼓里,后人也鲜知内幕。希特勒好象对女人有种魔力,不少社交界的贵妇对他大为钦佩,并为他向上爬铺平了道路。他的外甥女吉莉因他去寻死,他的情人爱娃与他同归于尽。一个胆大包天的女飞行员在柏林激战时企图驾机将希特勒从地堡中营救出去。一个崇拜希特勒的英国贵族小姐,因无法实现英德结盟的梦想,向自己的太阳穴开了一枪。
出版社:武汉出版社 2016年9月
简介:这是一本为年轻人倾心打造的青春版本书,48幅精美插图欢乐呈现。心理学大师西格蒙德•弗洛伊德在研究大量有关“梦”的文献时对前人的理论进行了大胆的分析和探讨,不仅推翻了前人一些妄自定论的错误观念,同时揭示了左右人类思想和行为的潜意识的奥秘。在对梦的观察研究中,弗洛伊德证实了一些典型梦是可以被科学解释的,梦确实能够展现出人们心底不能认知或没有认知到的心理活动。书中,弗洛伊德对“梦的产生的原因和素材”、“梦是如何运作”、“有关于梦与心理之间的联系”等进行了详细的探讨。任何梦都不是空穴来风。本书教会我们如何通过科学的分析梦中素材了解自己的梦境。“梦的解析”在打破梦的神秘感的同时,让我们在生活中更全面的认知自己的心理活动。妙趣横生的行文,独具匠心的图解,随书附赠“专属于你的记梦手册”。先读懂自己,再拥有世界。
简介:Summary: Publisher Summary 1 With Sigmund Freud notoriously flummoxed about what women want, any encounter between psychoanalysis and feminism would seem to promise a standoff. But in this lively, often surprising history, Mari Jo Buhle reveals that the twentieth century's two great theories of liberation actually had a great deal to tell each other. Starting with Freud's 1909 speech to an audience that included the feminist and radical Emma Goldman, Buhle recounts all the twists and turns this exchange took in the United States up to the recent American vogue of Jacques Lacan. While chronicling the contributions of feminism to the development of psychoanalysis, she also makes an intriguing case for the benefits psychoanalysis brought to feminism.From the first, American psychoanalysis became the property of freewheeling intellectuals and popularists as well as trained analysts. Thus the cultural terrain that Buhle investigates is populated by literary critics, artists and filmmakers, historians, anthropologists, and sociologists--and the resulting psychoanalysis is not so much a strictly therapeutic theory as an immensely popular form of public discourse. She charts the history of feminism from the first wave in the 1910s to the second in the 1960s and into a variety of recent expressions. Where these paths meet, we see how the ideas of Freud and his followers helped further the real-life goals of a feminism that was a widespread social movement and not just an academic phenomenon. The marriage between psychoanalysis and feminism was not pure bliss, however, and Buhle documents the trying moments; most notably the "Momism" of the 1940s and 1950s, a remarkable instance of men blaming their own failures of virility on women.An ambitious and highly engaging history of ideas, Feminism and Its Discontentsbrings together far-flung intellectual tendencies rarely seen in intimate relation to each other--and shows us a new way of seeing both.
简介: Book Description The World Literature series reproduces the greatest books the world over with only the highest production standards. History, philosophy, psychology, political theory, fiction, and ancient texts are now accessible to everyone at an extremely affordable price. This text presents Freud's theory that man is unable to tolerate too much reality, and that dreams are the contraband representations of the beast within man which are smuggled into awareness during sleep. The analysis of dreams is the key to unlocking the vital secrets of the unconscious mind. Synopsis: This groundbreaking new translation of The Interpretation of Dreams is the first to be based on the original text published in November 1899. It restores Freud's original argument, unmodified by revisions he made following the book's critical reception. Reading the first edition reveals Freud's original emphasis on the use of words in dreams and on the difficulty of deciphering them and Joyce Crick captures with far greater immediacy and accuracy than previous translations by Strachey's Freud's emphasis and terminology. An accessible introduction by Ritchie Robertson summarizes and comments on Freud's argument and relates it to his early work. Close annotation explains Freud's many autobiographical, literary and historical allusions and makes this the first edition to present Freud's early work in its full intellectual and cultural context. Amazon.com Whether we love or hate Sigmund Freud, we all have to admit that he revolutionized the way we think about ourselves. Much of this revolution can be traced to The Interpretation of Dreams, the turn-of-the-century tour de force that outlined his theory of unconscious forces in the context of dream analysis. Introducing the id, the superego, and their problem child, the ego, Freud advanced scientific understanding of the mind immeasurably by exposing motivations normally invisible to our consciousness. While there's no question that his own biases and neuroses influenced his observations, the details are less important than the paradigm shift as a whole. After Freud, our interior lives became richer and vastly more mysterious. These mysteries clearly bothered him--he went to great (often absurd) lengths to explain dream imagery in terms of childhood sexual trauma, a component of his theory jettisoned mid-century, though now popular among recovered-memory therapists. His dispassionate analyses of his own dreams are excellent studies for cognitive scientists wishing to learn how to sacrifice their vanities for the cause of learning. Freud said of the work contained in The Interpretation of Dreams, "Insight such as this falls to one's lot but once in a lifetime." One would have to feel quite fortunate to shake the world even once. --Rob Lightner From The New England Journal of Medicine(March 23, 2000) The 100th anniversary of Freud's The Interpretation of Dreams saw the publication of a new translation by Joyce Crick and a "neurophilosophical" treatise on the subject by Owen Flanagan, professor of philosophy, experimental psychology, and neurobiology at Duke University. Taken together, they beg to be read in the light of current ideas about dreams. How far Freud has fallen in the past few decades is clearly reflected in the introduction to the new translation, written by Ritchie Robertson. No, Robertson acknowledges, Freud's theory of dreaming is not scientific; it is not falsifiable, it is embarrassingly sexual and sexist, it undervalues imagery and emotions, and it overvalues verbal repartee. Indeed, Robertson admits, "the scientific study of the mind can proceed with little reference to Freud." Still, he insists, Freud has "helped us to understand the psyche as deep, complex, and mysterious." Is his theory only of historical interest? Freud's own review of the scientific literature of the time suggests that he has not contributed as much as we might think. The content of dreams was already seen by pre-Freudians as determined by previous experiences and as arising in what Ludwig Strumpell referred to as "almost memory-less isolation" from those experiences. Dreams were already seen as bizarre and chaotic, driven, as Freud described the theories of Wilhelm Wundt, by "internal... excitations of the sensory organs." The views of this pre-Freudian scientific community were remarkably similar to those held by neurobiologists and cognitive neuroscientists today. What, then, did Freud add to the study of dreams? Beautiful literature, but mostly bad theory and methodology. Dreams serve to discharge pent-up energy associated with unsatisfied infantile wishes. Dream construction follows a tortured path, with the condensation of many ideas into one and the displacement of their "energies" to unrelated images, all to keep the forbidden wishes from reaching consciousness. Freud's interpretations are stunning: a woman's dream about going to Italy (gen Italien -- to Italy) reflects a hidden wish concerning genitals (Genitalien). Why? Because it is obvious. One is reminded of Plato's "proof" in the Republic that the philosopher-king leads a life that is 729 times more pleasant than that of a tyrant. All in all, Freud's theory of dreams can probably best be described as 50 percent right and 100 percent wrong. Many of his observations about dreams (not their interpretation) are insightful. If viewed as a historical work, perhaps metaphorically, The Interpretation of Dreams can be enjoyable and thought-provoking. But those looking for a scientific explanation of dreaming had best look elsewhere. Even those seeking to use dream interpretation as a clinical tool deserve a more useful model, one more consonant with modern scientific theory. A hundred years after Freud, we seem to be back where he started. In Dreaming Souls, Flanagan seeks to answer philosophical questions about dreaming in the light of what we know about neurobiology. Still, when he talks about dreaming, he is referring specifically to the conscious experience of dreaming, with or without subsequent recall on waking, and not to the underlying physiology of the dreaming state. Although this minimal and somewhat naive attention to physiology is disappointing, it does not make his book uninteresting. Consciousness, he proposes, evolved to solve specific problems, such as how to permit the selective allocation of limited brain resources to just one of many competing sensory inputs -- what we call "attention." What, one might ask, does consciousness offer that the underlying neurophysiology could not handle equally well? Perhaps, Flanagan seems to suggest, consciousness just happened to appear before a "mindless" physiologic alternative did, and it worked well enough. Maybe consciousness and emotions represent just one of many solutions that could have evolved to deal with these problems. Perhaps (and it is a terrifying thought) consciousness could just as easily not have evolved. What about dreaming? This, Flanagan argues, is merely an unintended side effect of waking consciousness; evolution forgot to turn the conscious mind off at night, resulting in dreams that "neither help nor hinder fitness." For Flanagan, the neurobiologic processes underlying consciousness in both waking and sleeping states are of only passing interest and may be, in the end, unimportant. He clearly feels that cognitive processing during sleep serves no evolutionary value, a position that flies in the face of most recent research (for example, on sleep and consolidation of memory). What, then, is sleep for? Flanagan seems to fall back on an old suggestion of Allan Hobson's, that sleep merely serves to allow stockpiles of neurotransmitters in the brain to be replenished. Such an explanation woefully underestimates both the cost and the value of sleep. Still, Flanagan provides a fascinating view of dreaming from the perspective of a modern philosopher. He presents an elegant explication of how dreams, constructed through a chaotic process without intent on the part of the dreamer, can not only still have meaning, but also be self-revealing and useful as well. Even if the experience of dreaming (as opposed to its underlying physiology) arose without evolutionary selection, he argues, it does not follow that dreams are meaningless or that dreaming is useless. Much of what we are was never selected for -- the abilities to solve partial differential equations and to write sonnets and soliloquies were not selected by evolutionary pressures. What we are and what we have evolved to be are not the same. Destiny is not biology, and dreams are not just noise produced by the sleeping brain. Flanagan's provocative commentary would make quick and enjoyable reading for anyone interested in the thoughtful study of dreaming and may yet provide the basis for a new framework for understanding what dreams mean and how they can be used: the goal of dream interpretation. But the big scientific questions remain unanswered. What is the role of sleep in cognitive and emotional processing? How do we integrate these physiologic processes with the phenomenology of dreaming? The time is ripe to address these questions. What might answers to these questions look like? Over the past 10 to 15 years, cognitive neuroscience has proved the existence of multiple, physically distinct memory systems, including working-memory, episodic-memory, and semantic-memory systems. As a consequence, the old idea of consolidating short-term memories into long-term memories has expanded to include concepts of transferring memories from one system to another and then integrating them into complex associative networks. New research suggests that these activities may depend on sleep and might even be the main function of sleep. Processes of memory transfer and integration occur both intentionally (through the frontal cortex) and automatically (through "self-organizing" bottom-up processes). These processes are more complex and more time-consuming than simpler forms of memory consolidation, and they appear to use the same brain regions required for sensory processing. Taken together, they beg for a state in which sensory input is blocked and conscious control of cognitive and affective processing is turned off. Although such a state would be optimal for the automatic reactivation and reprocessing of ensembles of preexisting memories, it would leave the organism dissociated from its environment and unable to interact with it safely. By adding immobility to these other conditions, sleep makes this state of "off-line" memory reprocessing both safe and effective; herein lies the evolutionary pressure for sleep. This, perhaps, is the beginning of a theory worth consideration by neurobiologists, cognitive scientists, and philosophers alike, and the questions it raises are both important and exciting. How would the reliable changes in chemical neuromodulation that are dependent on the stage of sleep, sensory-input gating, generation of electroencephalographic waves, and regional brain activation facilitate off-line memory reprocessing? Which component parts of such a memory-reprocessing system would each sleep stage support? For example, during rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep, distant and unpredictable cortical associations, but not episodic memories, appear to be preferentially activated, leading to the bizarre, symbolic, and hyperemotional narratives found in classic dreams. In contrast, during non-REM sleep, mentation is generally more linear and thoughtlike. How and why would the brain modulate memory-reprocessing systems in these ways? And, finally, what function, if any, might our conscious awareness of this reprocessing -- what we call dreaming -- serve? I hope that the answers to these questions are not too far away. Reviewed by Robert Stickgold, Ph.D. From AudioFile Freud's most famous and polemic book presents a challenge to narrator Robert Whitfield, who interprets the heavy rhetoric with dispatch and precision, while relating the fascinating dreams with expressive interest and skill. The German text is translated into unstilted English, but the remaining French allows Whitfield to exploit his bilingual ability. Modern medicines have made psychoanalysis less popular than in its heyday, but the impact of Freudian theory on our civilization can never be ignored. For the curious and the serious, Whitfield aptly augments the exploration of this classic book just as a guide aids the tour of an old church. J.A.H. From Library Journal This volume of essays (part of a new series) reflects a wide range of disciplines: sociology, history, literature, and philosophy. Several are works of historic importance by major thinkers, including Wittgenstein and Erikson. Others are more recent works informed by modern thinkers, most notably Lacan. Though of limited appeal to the lay reader in its assumption of a working knowledge of Freud's dream work and its failure to link the essays, the book will interest scholars, particularly those in the humanities concerned with psychoanalysis. Several essays, particularly Meredith Skura's concerning the literary use of dream interpretation, are outstanding commentaries on Freud's landmark work. Paul Hymowitz, Psychiatry Dept., Cornell Medical Ctr., New York About Author Sigmund Freud was born in 1856 at Freiburg in Moravia and died in London in 1939. He embarked on medical studies in Vienna, working at the same time at the Institute for Cerebral Anatomy. Financial circumstances compelled him to postpone his prime interest, pure research, and he became a clinical neurologist. In 1884 he was introduced by Dr. Josef Breuer, a Viennese physician, to the "cathartic" method of treatment of hysteria, which was the starting point of what later became psychoanalysis. Studies in Hysteria was the result of Freud's and Breuer's collaboration in this area. Freud then went on alone to work at "psychoanalysis," examining the structure, nature, and diseases of the mind. As a result of his studies in literature, art, mythology, and religion, he found further evidence to support the revolutionary theories he had discovered in therapeutic practice. The Interpretation of Dreams was first published in 1900. Freud wrote of it in 1931: "It contains, even according to my present-day judgment, the most valuable of all the discoveries it has been my good fortune to make. Insight such as this falls to one's lot but once in a lifetime." Book Dimension : length: (cm)19.8 width:(cm)12.6
简介:Anthology of key statements from a range of disciplines, including four editorial essays which place the readings in their theoretical and historical context. It is divided into three parts: "Cultures of the visual," "Regulating photographic meanings," and "Looking and subjectivity." Texts are: "The natural attitude," by Norman Bryson; "Rhetoric of the image," by Roland Barthes; "Art, common sense and photography," by Victor Burgin; "Myth today," by Roland Barthes; "Panopticism," by Michel Foucault; "The work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction," by Walter Benjamin; "The image-world," by Susan Sontag; "Separation perfected," by Guy Debord; "The bottom line on planet one: squaring up to The Face," by Dick Hebdige; "On the institutions of photography," by Simon Watney; "The social definition of photography," by Pierre Bourdieu; "Reading an archive: photography between labour and capital," by Allan Sekula; "Photography’s discursive spaces," by Rosalind Krauss; "The museum’s old, the library’s new subject," by Douglas Crimp; "Living with contradictions: critical practices in the age of supply-side aesthetics," by Abigail Solomon-Godeau; "Evidence, truth and order: a means of surveillance," by John Tagg; "Feeble monsters: making up disabled people," by Jessica Evans; "Marketing mass photography," by Don Slater; "Ideology and ideological state apparatuses (notes towards an investigation)," by Louis Althusser; "Fetishism," by Sigmund Freud; "The scoptophilic instinct and identification," by Otto Fenichel; "The subject," by Kaja Silverman; "Fantasia," by Elizabeth Cowie; "The other question: the stereotype and colonial discourse," by Homi K. Bhabha; "Visual pleasure and narrative cinema," by Laura Mulvey; "Desperately seeking difference," by Jackie Stacey; "White privilege and looking relations: race and gender in feminist film theory," by Jane Gaines; "Sexuality in the field of vision," by Jacqueline Rose; "The fact of blackness," by Frantz Fanon; "Alexander von HumboldtMauri ertikel:
作者: (奥)格奥尔格·马库斯著;顾牧译
出版社:人民文学出版社,2011
简介:格奥尔格·马库斯以生动、幽默的语言,循着弗洛伊德的私人生活与学术研究这两条线索,将“精神分析学之父”一生中的重要经历和学术研究的重大发展阶段娓娓道来,从艰深的理论与抽象的心理学概念中剥离出一个生动、饱满的弗洛伊德形象呈现给读者。


































