Pisanje ženskog tela: Mesto (mog) tela u jeziku, slučaj Kathy Acker
Published in Nova misao - časopis za savremenu kulturu Vojvodine br. 16, IU „Misao“, Novi Sad, 2012.
‘ “Virility in Design”: Advertising Austin Reed and the “New Tailoring” during the Interwar Period in Britain’, Fashion Theory, Vol.9, No. 1, 2005, p. 57-83
by Paul Jobling
The first half of the twentieth century was undoubtedly one of the most fecund and complex periods in both the history... more
The first half of the twentieth century was undoubtedly one of the most fecund and complex periods in both the history of advertising and the promotion of men’s wear in Britain. This was a time when vast sums of money were being dedicated to the production and circulation of advertisements promoting men’s clothing; between January and September 1933, for instance, nearly fifty-six thousand pounds (the equivalent of just over three millions pounds in 2001) were spent by nine outfitters on press advertising space alone. This article concentrates on one of these companies – Austin Reed, which not only had a sizeable publicity budget (between January and September 1933, for instance, it spent £40,820 on press advertising) but also pioneered inventive ways of advertising men’s wear in poster and press campaigns from its foundation in 1900 until the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939.
Pandering to a predominantly upper middle class clientele, press advertising for Austin Reed appeared in the likes of the Times, Daily Mail, Evening Standard, Radio Times and Punch during the 1920s and 1930s (all of which had a solid Class A, B and C readership at this time, or those with gross annual earnings of between £250 and £1,000 and above). But in promoting ideas of class and status, Austin Reed also espoused modernist graphic aesthetics in both its poster and press campaigns that involved the simplification of shapes and forms, photographs, sanserif typefaces, and white space. In this regard the contribution of the commercial artist Tom Purvis and the copywriter W.D.H. McCullough was pivotal in elaborating visual and verbal rhetoric that transcended ‘reason why’ advertising, which emphasised the use value of any product, and tended instead to suggestive or atmospheric forms of promotion that transformed ‘simple use into an experience of the mind’.
(Un)touched by Words: Psychoanalytic writing on Music and Musical aspect of Psychoanalysis
Published in Ma’arag: The Israel Annual of Psychoanalysis, 2011, Volume 2 (pp. 55-82). © 2011 Magnes Press/The Sigmund Freud Center, The Hebrew University
(UN)TOUCHED BY WORDS:PSYCHOANALYTIC WRITINGS ON MUSIC AND MUSICAL ASPECTS OF PSYCHOANALYSIS
ODELIA... more
(UN)TOUCHED BY WORDS:PSYCHOANALYTIC WRITINGS ON MUSIC AND MUSICAL ASPECTS OF PSYCHOANALYSIS
ODELIA HITRON
This essay reviews the development and changes in psychoanalysis’ theoretical account of music, in an attempt to better understand the nature of the relations between the two as art, science and technique. I attempt to recount the slow process by which music has been transformed from being perceived as an "opponent" of psychoanalysis, to being seen as it’s complementary.
In my review, I show how the early Freudian perspective conspicuously failed to refer to music – that is, to take it up as a subject of study – since the type and quality of the psychic excitements that are generated by music could not be accounted for in classical psychoanalysis’ content-oriented and symbol-seeking investigations. This conceptual discrepancy necessarily led to a conflict, one which manifested as disinterest and/or ignorance.
With the establishment of ego psychology this began to change, as its expanded theoretization of the mechanisms of sublimation was better able to formulate a number of important concepts in respect to the various functions of music. This approach pointed out formal similarities between the psychical structure of primary and secondary processes, and the respective musical structure of a primary rhythmical layer and a secondary melodic layer, which, in turn, made it possible to speak about the unique character of the therapist’s listening faculty, which makes him or her attuned to each of these layers.
Soon after, object relations theories, and especially Donald W. Winnicott’s theory concerning the relations between creativity, being and formlessness, provided a the framework for further and firmer theoretization of the role of music within these processes. In my view, this aspect of Winnicott’s work constitutes the point of transition leading to what was later to develop into recognition of the musical dimension inherent to the field of psychoanalysis. This recognition of the musical components of therapy gives us the opportunity to examine not just their form, but also their content and meaning. It is only by establishing the relations between them, and by viewing them as irrevocably mixed, that we understand them both properly. Only in that manner can the “music” of psychoanalytic therapy be “touched” by words.
_______________
© 2011 Magnes Press/The Sigmund Freud Center, The Hebrew University
Ma’arag: The Israel Annual of Psychoanalysis, 2011, Volume 2 (pp. 55-82).
118 views
Seen by: and 20 moreThe intellectual outside: Anti-intellectualism and the subject of populist discourses in Australian newspapers
by Ben Glasson
Published in Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies, 26:1, 101-114.
A discourse analysis of anti-intellectualism in Australian newspapers, this study proceeds from the philosophical and... more A discourse analysis of anti-intellectualism in Australian newspapers, this study proceeds from the philosophical and theoretical assumptions of Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe's discourse theory, integrating into that framework several methodological tools for close textual analysis. Focusing on four interrelated anti-intellectual themes drawn from a corpus of 60 newspaper articles, it examines the discursive struggles that have hegemonized some anti-intellectualist meanings and excluded others. Placing these struggles into the historical and political context of the 1990s and 2000s, newspaper anti-intellectualist discourse can be understood as one articulation of an emergent populism that aimed to reconstruct a traditional Australian social space. However, it is shown to be the overdetermination of intellectualism as difference or differing – by virtue of its very formal structure – that makes it stand over and above other articulations, such as anti-refugee, anti-gay and anti-Aboriginal articulations. Thus, rather than being a contingent articulation, intellectualism is shown to be highly prone to disarticulation, and thus presents as a signifier peculiarly suited to strategic deployment as ‘other’ in the constitution of a populist Australian subject.
(Re)writing home: repetition and return in Pied-Noir literature
by Amy Hubbell
Dissertation. University of Michigan, 2003.
Nietzsche contra Freud on Bad Conscience
2010, Nietzsche-Studien 39, 434-54.
While much has been made of the similarities between the work of Nietzsche and Freud, insufficient attention has been... more While much has been made of the similarities between the work of Nietzsche and Freud, insufficient attention has been paid to their differences. Even where they have been noted, the degree of these differences, which sometimes approaches direct opposition, has often been underestimated. In the following essay, I will suggest that on the topic of conscience Nietzsche and Freud have radically opposed views, with profoundly different moral consequences. Despite superficial similarities, Nietzsche’s conception of conscience is opposed to that of Freud in almost every conceivable way. For Freud, conscience is primarily associated with bad will, repression, subordination to social prohibition, and the feeling of guilt. For Nietzsche, conscience is primarily related to affirmation, memory, individual sovereignty, and the feelings of pride and power. To be sure, Freudian “bad conscience” has its parallel in Nietzsche’s philosophy—but only as a modality of conscience, not as its foundation. Freudian conscience is, on the contrary, an essentially bad conscience.
the psychologist
the psychologist, vol. 25 no. 1 january 2012
The British Psychological Society more
the psychologist, vol. 25 no. 1 january 2012
The British Psychological Society www.bps.org.uk www.thepsychologist.org.uk
The Impossible Professions
"Do you believe in The Unconcious?"
Dr. Prof. Jacques Alain-Miller, Lacanian Psychoanalyst/Scholar
Translator/General Editor of The Seminar of Jacques Lacan
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OwrYXfiu1o4&feature=player_embedded
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2emnIlOhfzc&feature=player_embedded
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0vCTVk69S_A&feature=player_embedded
How Psychoanalysis 'Relates' to Neuro Science and Psychiatry
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LXnZ0-8KmQ&feature=channel_video_title
Dr. Prof. Peter Fonagy, The British Psychoanalytical Society, UCL Psychoanalysis Unit and the Anna Freud Centre.
References
Freud Museum http://www.freud.org.uk
Anna Freud Centre http://www.annafreud.org
The British Psychological Society http://www.bps.org.uk
UCL Psychoanalysis Unit http://www.ucl.ac.uk/psychoanalysis
The Institute of Psychoanalysis http://www.psychoanalysis.org.uk
British Psychoanalytic Council http://www.psychoanalytic-council.org
The Site for Contemporary Psychoanalysis http://www.the-site.org.uk
Centre for Freudian Analysis and Research (CFAR) http://www.cfar.org.uk
London Society of the New Lacanian School http://www.londonsociety-nls.org.uk
The Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust http://www.tavistockandportman.nhs.uk
83 views
Seen by:Prescription: Columbo
Term Paper on the popular American TV show 'Columbo' for the course 'Crime Fiction'.
Psychoanalytic reading of Columbo. Please refer to first 2 pages for a more detailed abstract.
Writer may... more
Psychoanalytic reading of Columbo. Please refer to first 2 pages for a more detailed abstract.
Writer may be contacted at deboleena.r[at]gmail[dot]com.
14 views
Seen by:106 views
Seen by:List of Short Psychoanalytic Psychology Essays by Ayla Michelle Demir
List of Short Psychoanalytic Psychology Essays by Ayla Michelle Demir
July 2011
Exploring... more
List of Short Psychoanalytic Psychology Essays by Ayla Michelle Demir
July 2011
Exploring Creativity Psychoanalytically:
Freud on the Nature of Creativity. 3000 words
Klein on the Nature of Creativity. 3000 words
The Affect of Creative Art 1500 words
December 2010
Introduction to Lacan: Consider the main features of Freud’s concept of the Ego. In what ways did Lacan’s ideas on the Formation of the Subject depart from Freud’s? 3000 words
July 2010
Psychoanalysis and Art: Using Psychoanalytic ideas discuss a work of Art - Man in the Tree Automatically produced Surreal Watercolour Painting by Ayla Michelle. 3000 words
March 2010
Psychoanalysis, Leadership and Organisation: A Review of Freudian and Kleinian Psychoanalytic Theories of Group Psychology. 3000 words
March 2008
Kleinian Object Relations Theories: The Role of the Life and Death Instincts in Kleinian Object Relations Theory. 3000 words
December 2007
Kleinian Object Relations Theories: Describe the Paranoid-Schizoid and Depressive Positions. 3000 words
July 2007
Loss, Longing and Creativity, Psychoanalysis and Literature: Discuss Loss of Self in Toni Morrison’s novel Beloved. 3000 words
March 2007
The Freudian Foundations of Psychoanalysis: Describe and give examples of Defence Mechanisms in Everyday Life. 3000 words
December 2006
The Freudian Foundations of Psychoanalysis: Describe and Evaluate Josef Breuer’s case of Anna O. 3000 words
July 2006
Jung and Analytical Psychology: How does a study of Alchemy, enhance our understanding of Unconscious Processes and Carl Jung’s concept of Individuation. 3000 words
January 2006
Narcissism, Depression and Authenticity: Describe the links between Freudian and Jungian theories of Narcissism in understanding Sex Addiction. 3000 words
December 2005
The Meaning of Myths: The Myth of Persephone. 1500 words
Lacanian Psychoanalytic Economics
Jacques Lacan (1901–1981)
1 + 1 = 2
1 + 1 = 2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hN1kH-MGm2c&feature=share
"Do you recognize me?" Jacques Lacan http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YWvtER7NNtY
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques_Lacan
42 views
Seen by:275 views
Seen by:926 views
Seen by: and 39 moreThe Life and Death Instincts in Kleinian Object Relations Theory.
This short essay on the psychical operations of the Life and Death Instincts, as seen in the Object Relations theories... more
This short essay on the psychical operations of the Life and Death Instincts, as seen in the Object Relations theories of Melanie Klein, was my first glance at Psychoanalytic Instinct Theory, studied and written in the Spring of 2008. Three years later, in the Autumn of 2011, I was in possession of the entire 24 volumes of The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, at my home and able to study them at leisure. A Psychoanalysis research associate on the Psychoanalysis, Literature and Practice Seminar Series at the School of Advanced Study, University of London, suggested I read Freud’s essay the Beyond the Pleasure Principle, Chapter 1 in Volume 18 of the Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud.
To my dismay the Beyond the Pleasure Principle chaper 1 of volume 18 is a very long essay indeed in 7 parts, but I was curious and had a desire to explore Freud’s writings as it felt like an adventure. I was pleasantly surprised to discover that Part 5 of the Beyond the Pleasure Principle essay is where Freud lays down the fundamental components of his Instinct Theory. My essay attached here is British psychoanalyst Melanie Klein’s interpretation, development and use of some of the possible psychical mechanisms and processes that can be said to result from Freud’s Instinct Theories. In this Abstract (also attached as an Appendix to my Kleinian, Life and Death Instincts in Object Relations Theory essay), I am tempted to summarize Freud’s actual Instinct Theory itself, as described in Part 5 of Beyond the Pleasure Principle, Vol. 18, p.34-43, as I have never heard it discussed or even mentioned in any Psychoanalytic context and I think it merits attention, especially considering the current Environmental zeitgeist and hegemony that we are all being subjected to.
(Instinct Is Conservative - Journal Article on Freud's Instinct Theory uploaded as a separate word doc.)
In comparison with Klein’s use of Instinct theory, it is plainly evident that she was interested in the functions of instincts as they can be seen operating in everyday life and death experiences and relations, while Freud was much more interested in the very nature of instinct itself. I hope my summary of Freud’s Instinct Theory will show how deep and wide variation in Psychoanalytic theorizing and practice is and how open and attentive Psychoanalytic inquiry and investigation is to an individual theorist’s inherent psychical constitution and conditioned psychodynamics, born of their inner personal/subjective life and death experiences, their external relations with significant others and the external collective conditions that individuals are subjected to. People, individuals/subjects, instinctively find, perceive, understand and even believe what they desire to know and this is one of the reasons why every reader/thinker is biased and projects onto and conditions a text with their own needs, ideas, prejudices, hopes, wishes and delusions. Every past thought and feeling is reawakened and modified by fresh experience through the cycles of time. I certainly can be accused of spinning Freud’s Beyond the Pleasure Principle (Part 5) text to suit my own interests and purposes, just as Melanie Klein took Freud’s ideas where she and her colleagues in the British School of Psychoanalysis (that was not yet formed at that time) were heading. Individuals have their own agenda, but can’t achieve it without others, as the Psychoanalytic theories of French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan have made exceptionally clear, in his own way, for his individual purposes and for the purposes of the collective (professional, social, political, etc.) ideologies that he chose to cathect. There can be no Self, whatever you want to call it - individual, person, human being, human organism, etc. - without an Other, because of the function of the I.
Pain, pleasure and power: selecting and assessing defended subjects. In L. BLack, H. Mendick and Y. Solomon (eds) Mathematical relationships: Identities and participation. New York: Routledge
by Laura Black
chapter co-authored with fellow editors Heather Mendick and Yvette Solomon
Counter-transference Issues in Psychotherapy with Lesbian and Gay Clients
Milton, M., Coyle, A. and Legg, C. (2005) Counter-transference Issues in Psychotherapy with Lesbian and Gay Clients, European Journal of Psychotherapy, Counselling and Health, 7 (3) 181-198.

