Symbiosis and ambiguity a psychoanalytic study

"Symbiosis and Ambiguity is the first English edition of the classic study of early object relations by influential Argentinian psychoanalyst José Bleger (1922-1972). It is rooted in Kleinian thinking and rich in clinical material. Bleger's thesis is that starting from primitive undiffere...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bleger, José (-)
Other Authors: Churcher, John, Bleger, Leopoldo, Roger, Susan
Format: eBook
Language:Inglés
Published: Hove, East Sussex ; New York : Routledge 2013.
Series:New library of psychoanalysis (Unnumbered)
Subjects:
Online Access:https://recursos.uloyola.es/login?url=https://accedys.uloyola.es:8443/accedix0/sitios/ebook.php?id=135095
See on Universidad Loyola - Universidad Loyola Granada:https://colectivo.uloyola.es/Record/ELB135095
Request an interlibrarian loan: Email
Description
Summary:"Symbiosis and Ambiguity is the first English edition of the classic study of early object relations by influential Argentinian psychoanalyst José Bleger (1922-1972). It is rooted in Kleinian thinking and rich in clinical material. Bleger's thesis is that starting from primitive undifferentiation, prior to the paranoid-schizoid position described by Klein, autism and symbiosis co-exist as narcissistic relations in a syncretic 'agglutinated' nucleus. In symbiosis part of the mind is deposited in an external person or situation; in autism it is deposited in the patient's own mind or body. The nucleus is ambiguous and persists in adults as the psychotic part of the personality.Symbiosis tends to immobilise the analytic process, so the analyst must mobilise, fragment and discriminate the agglutinated nucleus, whose ambiguity tends to 'blunt' persecutory situations. The psychoanalytic setting functions as a silent refuge for the psychotic part of the personality, where it creates a 'phantom world'. At some point, therefore, the setting itself has to be analysed and the analytic relationship de-symbiotised, as Bleger observes in a celebrated chapter on the setting. José Bleger's work demonstrates the need to analyse early narcissistic object relations as they arise clinically, especially in the setting. More widely, he regards undifferentiation and participation as operating throughout life: in groups, institutions, and society as a whole"--
Physical Description:1 online resource (xlvii, 340 pages)
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 305-325) and Index.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9781136204159