Individuality and Ideology in British Object Relations Theory

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A01=Gal Gerson
Active citizenship
Advanced Liberal
Applied Psychoanalysis
Author_Gal Gerson
Benjamin's Scheme
Benjamin’s Scheme
British Object Relations
British Object Relations Theory
C. Fred Alford
Category=JHB
Category=JHBA
Category=JMAF
Category=JP
Category=JPA
Category=JPFK
Category=NHAH
Category=QD
Christopher Lasch
David P. Levine
developmental psychology
Dialectical Modes of Experience
Donald Winnicott
Drive Structure Model
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Fairbairn Winnicott Suttie analysis
Feeds Back
Follow
Freudian Psychoanalytic Theory
Friction
Gal Gerson
Gradual Distancing
Hegel's Dialectics
Hegel’s Dialectics
Holding
Ian Dishart Suttie
Ideology
Intersubjectivity
James Glass
Jessica Benjamin
John Bowlby
Karl Popper
liberal political philosophy
Liberal Welfare State
Liberalism
Makeup
maternal agency
Matthew H. Bowker
Melanie Reizes Klein
Neo-Kleinian Object Relations Theory
Object Relations
Object Relations Analysts
Object Relations Psychoanalysis
Object Relations Theory
Object Relations Thought
Object Relations Tradition
Open Society
Patriarchal or matriarchal orientation
Peaceful civilizations
Persona
Political Psychology
Political Theory
Post-war
Pristine
psychoanalysis and society
Psychoanalytic Political Theory
psychoanalytic theory
Psychohistory
Relational Psychoanalysis
Ronald Fairbairn
Smooth
Social and Political Philosophy
social philosophy
Social Theory
Sociology of Knowledge
Superimposed
T.H. Marshall's Social Citizenship
Thomas Ogden
Transitional Space
Viennese
Voluntary Associations

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367761653
  • Weight: 280g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Following the work of prominent object relations theorists, such as Fairbairn, Suttie and Winnicott, Gal Gerson explores the correlation between analytical theory and intellectual environment in two ways. He notes the impact that the British object relations school had on both psychology and wider culture, and suggests that the school’s outlook involved more than a clinical choice.

Gerson first interprets the object relations model as a political theory that completes a certain internal development within liberalism. He later outlines the relationship between the analytical theory and the historical setting in which it formed and took root. By engaging with these questions, Gerson demonstrates the deeper structure and implications of object relation theory for social philosophy. This allows him to answer questions such as: ‘What kind of social arrangements do we endorse when we accept object relations theory as a fair description of mind?’; ‘What beliefs about power, individuality, and household structure do we take in? What do we give up when doing so?’; and, lastly, ‘What does it say about contemporary advanced societies that they have taken in much of the theory’s content?’

Proposing a novel rethinking of human nature, Individuality and Ideology in British Object Relations Theory provides much-needed insight into how this school of psychoanalytic theory has impacted contemporary social and political life.

Gal Gerson teaches political theory and the history of political thought at the University of Haifa, Israel.

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