From Dyad to Dialogue: Language and the Early Relationship in American Psychoanalytic Theory
The centrality of language for a Freudian theory of mind and treatment has not been retained by most post-Freudian theorists. American writers have turned to academic developmental research on mother-child interactions to depict the preoedipal period as preverbal, presymbolic, nonconscious. This vie...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 2011-06, Vol.59 (3), p.483-507 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The centrality of language for a Freudian theory of mind and treatment has not been retained by most post-Freudian theorists. American writers have turned to academic developmental research on mother-child interactions to depict the preoedipal period as preverbal, presymbolic, nonconscious. This view presents the early relationship as developing in linear stages in which visual observational data (e.g., contingent behavior action patterns between two persons) are privileged over aural-oral data of communicational exchanges. An alternative view is presented that redefines the earliest relationship in terms of communicational exchanges, mediation, and dialogue. The claim is that understanding the nature of mediated communication keeps language central to psychoanalysis and reestablishes an intrapsychic dimension in the concept of relationship that is lost when relationship is reduced to behavioral patterns. |
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ISSN: | 0003-0651 1941-2460 |
DOI: | 10.1177/0003065111406440 |