Selving

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A01=Irene Fast
Author_Irene Fast
Blot Actualities
Bodily Concomitants
Category=JMAF
Category=JMS
das
Drive Derivatives
Dynamic Schemes
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
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Freud's Ich
Friendly Expanse
Home Town
Horrid Empty Spaces
ich
Impersonal Functions
Interaction Mode
Interaction Units
internal
Internal Working Models
Main's Adult Attachment Interview
metaphoric
Metaphoric Projections
models
Nonself World
Nursing Event
Nursing Scheme
Ogden's View
paranoid
Paranoid Schizoid Mode
projections
psychoanalytic
Psychoanalytic Psychology
psychology
Rorschach Images
Self-other Differentiation
Sort
Timeless
Vice Versa
working

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138009752
  • Weight: 272g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Dec 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In Selving: A Relational Theory of Self Organization, Irene Fast invokes the basic distinction between the self as "me" and the self as "I" in order to develop a contemporary theory of the self as subject. In a return to Freud's clinical finding that all psychological processes are personally motivated, she elaborates a notion of the "I-self" that is intrinsically dynamic and relational. Within this conception, our perceiving, thinking, feeling, and acting are not what our self does; rather, they are what our self is.

According to Fast, the basic unit of the dynamic I-self --of selving --is a scheme of personally motivated interaction between self and nonself. This notion, which comprehends development (and developmental failure) as a product of integration and differentiation among discrete I-schemes, provides a radically new framework for understanding those dynamic phenomena that Freud included within his structural model of the mind and that contemporary theorists have addressed within object relational perspectives. Via the notion of selving, Fast likewise brings fresh insight to a host of issues that have engaged psychoanalysts and developmental psychologists in recent years. These topics include the place of bodily experience in a relational model of mind, the organization of self as simultaneously individual and relational, the formulation of a constructivist model of psychic structure, among others.

Selving is not only a lucid demonstration of how a relational theory of self can reorder clinical observations in conceptually and therapeutically illuminating ways. It is also a convincing demonstration of how a constructivist model emphasizing the interactive nature of meaning-making provides bridges to Piagetian theory, developmental research, and observational infancy studies.

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