The Widening Scope of ShameMelvin R. Lansky, Andrew P. Morrison Analytic Press, 1997 - 437 psl. The Widening Scope of Shame is the first collection of papers on shame to appear in a decade and contains contributions from most of the major authors currently writing on this topic. It is not a sourcebook, but a comprehensive introduction to clinical and theoretical perspectives on shame that is intended to be read cover to cover. The panoramic scope of this multidisciplinary volume is evidenced by a variety of clinically and developmentally grounded chapters; by chapters explicating the theories of Silvan Tomkins and Helen Block Lewis; and by chapters examining shame from the viewpoints of philosophy, social theory, and the study of family systems. A final section of brief chapters illuminates shame in relation to specific clinical problems and experiential contexts, including envy, attention deficit disorder, infertility, masochism, the medical setting, and religious experience. This collection will be of special interest to psychoanalytically oriented readers. It begins with a chapter charting the evolution of Freud's thinking on shame, followed by chapters providing contemporary perspectives on the role of shame in development, and the status of shame within the theory of narcissism. Of further psychoanalytic interest are two reprinted classics by Sidney Levin on shame and marital dysfunction. In both depth of clinical coverage and breadth of perspectives, The Widening Scope of Shame is unique in the shame literature. Readable, well organized, and completely up to date, it becomes essential reading for all students of this intriguing and unsettling emotion and of human development more generally. |
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7 psl.
... important attitudes toward shame in relation to intrapsychic conflict that remain important facets of psychoanalytic thinking : shame as the painful affect underlying the need for repression ; shame as a major mode of reaction formation ...
... important attitudes toward shame in relation to intrapsychic conflict that remain important facets of psychoanalytic thinking : shame as the painful affect underlying the need for repression ; shame as a major mode of reaction formation ...
213 psl.
... important one : " Shame is the emotion second to none in the extent of its influence upon social behavior " ( p . 124 ) . Like Darwin , he seems to have understood that shame arises as a result of self - monitoring , although he was not ...
... important one : " Shame is the emotion second to none in the extent of its influence upon social behavior " ( p . 124 ) . Like Darwin , he seems to have understood that shame arises as a result of self - monitoring , although he was not ...
221 psl.
... important contribution was her discovery of unac- knowledged shame , the kind of low - visibility emotion predicated in the work of Cooley and of Goffman , but only conceptually . By patiently analyzing the transcripts of hundreds of ...
... important contribution was her discovery of unac- knowledged shame , the kind of low - visibility emotion predicated in the work of Cooley and of Goffman , but only conceptually . By patiently analyzing the transcripts of hundreds of ...
Turinys
The Legacy of Freuds Writings on Shame | 3 |
Early Developmental Issues | 41 |
Shame Narcissism and Intersubjectivity | 63 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 21
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Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Adam and Eve adult analysis anger anxiety ashamed attention attitude basic become behavior Broucek child clinical cognitive complex concept conflict consciousness context countertransference defense denial depression developmental disgust dissmell dream ego ideal embarrassment emotion envy excitement experience of shame failure fantasy fear Freud grandiosity Hillsdale Hogarth Press human humiliation husband important infant infertility innate affect interaction interest-excitement International Universities Press intersubjective involve Jewish renewal Kohut Lansky Lewis Lewis's masochism mechanism Microsociology moral Morrison narcissism narcissistic Nathanson neural firing Neurosis Nietzsche object Oedipus complex one's oneself pain parents pathological patient person positive affect pride and shame primary primary narcissism problem Psychoanal psychoanalytic psychology psychotherapy reaction formation reactions rejection relation relationship response Retzinger role of shame Scheff self-consciousness selfobject sense sequence sexual shame affect shame and guilt shame experience Silvan Tomkins situation specific stimulus Stolorow superego therapeutic therapist tion Tomkins triggered unconscious understanding vulnerability wife Wurmser York