Interpretation of Dreams

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Duschinsky R. - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Such stuff as Dreams are made on: John Bowlby and the Interpretation of Dreams
    'Informa UK Limited', 2020
    Co-Authors: Horst, F.c.p. Van Der, Van Der Veer R., Duschinsky R.
    Abstract:

    In this paper, newly uncovered archival material from the Bowlby archives is presented on Bowlby’s own Dreams and dream Interpretation. Although he was critical of orthodox psychoanalysis, Bowlby appears to have been seriously involved in Freudian dream Interpretation in the 1930s and 1940s. Here, we present in annotated form his own Interpretations of several of his Dreams from that time and a series of lectures on Dreams. In Attachment and Loss, classic dream Interpretation is absent and Bowlby used the content of Dreams as a reflection of the influence of real-life experiences on the representations of attachment relations, with a clear focus on grief, loss, and mourning. Bowlby’s shift from psychoanalysis to a more behavioral approach and the introduction of the concept of “defensive exclusion” to supplant Freud’s concept ofrepression” may have led him to think abou

  • Such stuff as Dreams are made on: John Bowlby and the Interpretation of Dreams
    'Informa UK Limited', 2020
    Co-Authors: Horst, F.c.p. Van Der, Van Der Veer R., Duschinsky R.
    Abstract:

    In this paper, newly uncovered archival material from the Bowlby archives is presented on Bowlby’s own Dreams and dream Interpretation. Although he was critical of orthodox psychoanalysis, Bowlby appears to have been seriously involved in Freudian dream Interpretation in the 1930s and 1940s. Here, we present in annotated form his own Interpretations of several of his Dreams from that time and a series of lectures on Dreams. In Attachment and Loss, classic dream Interpretation is absent and Bowlby used the content of Dreams as a reflection of the influence of real-life experiences on the representations of attachment relations, with a clear focus on grief, loss, and mourning. Bowlby’s shift from psychoanalysis to a more behavioral approach and the introduction of the concept of “defensive exclusion” to supplant Freud’s concept ofrepression” may have led him to think about how grief and mourning may affect the content of our Dreams

Duschinsky Robbie - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Such stuff as Dreams are made on: John Bowlby and the Interpretation of Dreams
    'Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD)', 2020
    Co-Authors: Duschinsky Robbie, Van Der Horst Frank, Van Der Veer René
    Abstract:

    In this paper, newly uncovered archival material from the Bowlby archives is presented on Bowlby’s own Dreams and dream Interpretation. Although he was critical of orthodox psychoanalysis, Bowlby appears to have been seriously involved in Freudian dream Interpretation in the 1930s and 1940s. Here, we present in annotated form his own Interpretations of several of his Dreams from that time and a series of lectures on Dreams. In Attachment and Loss, classic dream Interpretation is absent and Bowlby used the content of Dreams as a reflection of the influence of real-life experiences on the representations of attachment relations, with a clear focus on grief, loss, and mourning. Bowlby’s shift from psychoanalysis to a more behavioral approach (using ethology and cybernetics) and the introduction of the concept of ‘defense exclusion’ to supplant Freud’s concept ofrepression’ may have led him to think about how grief and mourning may affect the content of our Dreams.Wellcome Grant WT103343M

  • Such stuff as Dreams are made on: John Bowlby and the Interpretation of Dreams.
    Attach Hum Dev, 2020
    Co-Authors: Frank Cp ,van Der Horst, Van Der Veer René, Duschinsky Robbie
    Abstract:

    In this paper, newly uncovered archival material from the Bowlby archives is presented on Bowlby's own Dreams and dream Interpretation. Although he was critical of orthodox psychoanalysis, Bowlby appears to have been seriously involved in Freudian dream Interpretation in the 1930s and 1940s. Here, we present in annotated form his own Interpretations of several of his Dreams from that time and a series of lectures on Dreams. In Attachment and Loss, classic dream Interpretation is absent and Bowlby used the content of Dreams as a reflection of the influence of real-life experiences on the representations of attachment relations, with a clear focus on grief, loss, and mourning. Bowlby's shift from psychoanalysis to a more behavioral approach and the introduction of the concept of "defensive exclusion" to supplant Freud's concept of "repression" may have led him to think about how grief and mourning may affect the content of our Dreams.Wellcome Grant WT103343M

Van Der Veer René - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Such stuff as Dreams are made on: John Bowlby and the Interpretation of Dreams
    'Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD)', 2020
    Co-Authors: Duschinsky Robbie, Van Der Horst Frank, Van Der Veer René
    Abstract:

    In this paper, newly uncovered archival material from the Bowlby archives is presented on Bowlby’s own Dreams and dream Interpretation. Although he was critical of orthodox psychoanalysis, Bowlby appears to have been seriously involved in Freudian dream Interpretation in the 1930s and 1940s. Here, we present in annotated form his own Interpretations of several of his Dreams from that time and a series of lectures on Dreams. In Attachment and Loss, classic dream Interpretation is absent and Bowlby used the content of Dreams as a reflection of the influence of real-life experiences on the representations of attachment relations, with a clear focus on grief, loss, and mourning. Bowlby’s shift from psychoanalysis to a more behavioral approach (using ethology and cybernetics) and the introduction of the concept of ‘defense exclusion’ to supplant Freud’s concept ofrepression’ may have led him to think about how grief and mourning may affect the content of our Dreams.Wellcome Grant WT103343M

  • Such stuff as Dreams are made on: John Bowlby and the Interpretation of Dreams.
    Attach Hum Dev, 2020
    Co-Authors: Frank Cp ,van Der Horst, Van Der Veer René, Duschinsky Robbie
    Abstract:

    In this paper, newly uncovered archival material from the Bowlby archives is presented on Bowlby's own Dreams and dream Interpretation. Although he was critical of orthodox psychoanalysis, Bowlby appears to have been seriously involved in Freudian dream Interpretation in the 1930s and 1940s. Here, we present in annotated form his own Interpretations of several of his Dreams from that time and a series of lectures on Dreams. In Attachment and Loss, classic dream Interpretation is absent and Bowlby used the content of Dreams as a reflection of the influence of real-life experiences on the representations of attachment relations, with a clear focus on grief, loss, and mourning. Bowlby's shift from psychoanalysis to a more behavioral approach and the introduction of the concept of "defensive exclusion" to supplant Freud's concept of "repression" may have led him to think about how grief and mourning may affect the content of our Dreams.Wellcome Grant WT103343M

Horst, F.c.p. Van Der - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Such stuff as Dreams are made on: John Bowlby and the Interpretation of Dreams
    'Informa UK Limited', 2020
    Co-Authors: Horst, F.c.p. Van Der, Van Der Veer R., Duschinsky R.
    Abstract:

    In this paper, newly uncovered archival material from the Bowlby archives is presented on Bowlby’s own Dreams and dream Interpretation. Although he was critical of orthodox psychoanalysis, Bowlby appears to have been seriously involved in Freudian dream Interpretation in the 1930s and 1940s. Here, we present in annotated form his own Interpretations of several of his Dreams from that time and a series of lectures on Dreams. In Attachment and Loss, classic dream Interpretation is absent and Bowlby used the content of Dreams as a reflection of the influence of real-life experiences on the representations of attachment relations, with a clear focus on grief, loss, and mourning. Bowlby’s shift from psychoanalysis to a more behavioral approach and the introduction of the concept of “defensive exclusion” to supplant Freud’s concept ofrepression” may have led him to think abou

  • Such stuff as Dreams are made on: John Bowlby and the Interpretation of Dreams
    'Informa UK Limited', 2020
    Co-Authors: Horst, F.c.p. Van Der, Van Der Veer R., Duschinsky R.
    Abstract:

    In this paper, newly uncovered archival material from the Bowlby archives is presented on Bowlby’s own Dreams and dream Interpretation. Although he was critical of orthodox psychoanalysis, Bowlby appears to have been seriously involved in Freudian dream Interpretation in the 1930s and 1940s. Here, we present in annotated form his own Interpretations of several of his Dreams from that time and a series of lectures on Dreams. In Attachment and Loss, classic dream Interpretation is absent and Bowlby used the content of Dreams as a reflection of the influence of real-life experiences on the representations of attachment relations, with a clear focus on grief, loss, and mourning. Bowlby’s shift from psychoanalysis to a more behavioral approach and the introduction of the concept of “defensive exclusion” to supplant Freud’s concept ofrepression” may have led him to think about how grief and mourning may affect the content of our Dreams

Cunliffe, Joshua John - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Dream construction, deconstruction: what a re-reading of Freud on Dreams can tell us about the structure of the unconscious and its relationship to deconstruction
    2019
    Co-Authors: Cunliffe, Joshua John
    Abstract:

    In this thesis, I argue that a deconstructive approach to Freudian dream-work gives new perspective on how meaning is generated in the mind. Using that perspective I develop a new metaphor for mind, and an accompanying theory of meaning. I argue that The Interpretation of Dreams suffered from assumptions about the nature of consciousness issuing from attachment to a ‘metaphysics of presence’. This inhibited the development of metapsychology, putting concepts such as the unconscious, phantasy and repression on an unstable basis and contributing to the subsequent development of psychoanalysis in a fragmented manner. It also prevented Freud from reaching valuable philosophical conclusions about the relationship of the unconscious to consciousness. Existing literature has examined Derrida’s approach to Freud but this has found application primarily in fields such as literary and critical theory: far less attention has been paid to the potential clinical implications of a deconstructive reading of Freud, or the possibilities for a revised theory of mind. Extending Derrida’s delineation of Freud’s metaphors for mind, I suggest a new metaphor, based on the method of Fractal Image Compression used to store images digitally. I claim this updated version of Freud’s ‘mystic writing pad’ enables us to conceptualize how the mind processes experience to produce meaning based on structures of difference, thereby providing a challenge to traditional representational theories of mind. This model of the mind provides a conceptual frame within which psychoanalytic theories can be evaluated and brought into conversation with each other. I use it as a tool to test different theories of dream Interpretation, analysing a dream of my own. I then demonstrate how we can employ it to critically evaluate different psychoanalytic schools of thought by showing how my account supports and extends Bion’s notion of ‘dream-work-alpha’, and challenges Lacan’s ideas about language and the unconscious