Freudian repression, the Unconscious, and the Dynamics of Inhibition

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A01=Simon Boag
affect regulation
Author_Simon Boag
Category=JMAF
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Freud's Early
Freud's Early Account
Freud's Early View
Freud's Italics
Freudian Repression
Freud’s Early
Freud’s Early Account
Freud’s Early View
Freud’s Italics
Hysterical Amnesia
Infantile Amnesia
Instinctual Drives
memory suppression
mentalization approach
Multiple Knowers
Negative Affective Component
Neural Inhibition
Non-experiential Realm
Objectless Anxiety
Pathogenic Idea
Primal Repression
psychoanalytic theory
psychodynamic mechanisms
Repressed Mental Content
Secondary Repression
Seduction Hypothesis
Selective Inattention
System Ucs
Threat Evaluation
Topographic Theory
trauma and memory
Unconscious Detections
unconscious memory retrieval
Unconscious Mental
Unconscious Mental Events

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367106546
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Possibly no other psychoanalytic concept has caused as much ongoing controversy, and attracted so much criticism, as that of 'repression'. Repression involves denying knowledge to oneself about the content of one's own mind and is most commonly implicated in disputes concerning the possibility of repressed memories of trauma (and their subsequent recovery). While fundamental in Freudian psychoanalysis, recent developments in psychoanalytic thinking (e.g., 'mentalization') have downplayed the importance of repression, in part due to less emphasis being placed on the importance of memory within therapy.
Simon Boag

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