Thinking through Fairbairn offers parallel perspectives on Fairbairn's work. It explores an extended interpretation of his 'psychology of dynamic structure' and applies that model to a number of different areas. Fairbairn's Scottish origins are explored through his relationship with the work of Ian Suttie and Edward Glover.
Thinking through Fairbairn offers parallel perspectives on Fairbairn's work. It explores an extended interpretation of his 'psychology of dynamic structure' and applies that model to a number of different areas. Fairbairn's Scottish origins are explored through his relationship with the work of Ian Suttie and Edward Glover.
Part 1: Scottish Contemporaries 1. Suttie's influence on Fairbairn's oject relations theory 2. Fairbairn and Glover: object relationships and ego-nuclei Part 2: Multiple Personality Disorder 3. Fairbairn's thinking on dissociative identity disorder and the development of his mature theory 4. Evelyn's PhD in Wellness - a Fairbairnian understanding of the therapeutic relationship with a woman with dissociative indentity disorder Part 3: Film 5. Failures of the "moral defence" in the films Shutter Island (Scorsese 2010), Inception (Nolan, 2010), and Memento (Nolan, 2000): narcissism or schizoid personality disorder? 6. Trauma, dissociation, and time distortion in some "puzzle" films Part 4: Relational Psychoanalysis 7. A modest proposal: Fairbairn's psychology of dynamic structure is not "between paradigms" but already a synthesis of classical and relational thinking 8. Fairbairn's object-relations-based psychology of dynamic structure, as a synthesis of the classical (thesis) and the relational (antithesis) in psycholanalytic theory Part 5: Instinct, Affect, and Neuropsychoanalysis 9. The place of instincts and affects in Fairbairn's psychology of dynamic structures 10. Thinking through Fairbairn redux
Part 1: Scottish Contemporaries 1. Suttie's influence on Fairbairn's oject relations theory 2. Fairbairn and Glover: object relationships and ego-nuclei Part 2: Multiple Personality Disorder 3. Fairbairn's thinking on dissociative identity disorder and the development of his mature theory 4. Evelyn's PhD in Wellness - a Fairbairnian understanding of the therapeutic relationship with a woman with dissociative indentity disorder Part 3: Film 5. Failures of the "moral defence" in the films Shutter Island (Scorsese 2010), Inception (Nolan, 2010), and Memento (Nolan, 2000): narcissism or schizoid personality disorder? 6. Trauma, dissociation, and time distortion in some "puzzle" films Part 4: Relational Psychoanalysis 7. A modest proposal: Fairbairn's psychology of dynamic structure is not "between paradigms" but already a synthesis of classical and relational thinking 8. Fairbairn's object-relations-based psychology of dynamic structure, as a synthesis of the classical (thesis) and the relational (antithesis) in psycholanalytic theory Part 5: Instinct, Affect, and Neuropsychoanalysis 9. The place of instincts and affects in Fairbairn's psychology of dynamic structures 10. Thinking through Fairbairn redux
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