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Christopher Bollas

    Die unendliche Frage
    Wenn die Sonne zerbricht
    Fangt sie auf, bevor sie fallen
    Der Schatten des Objekts
    Genese der Persönlichkeit
    Freud und das Nichteuropäische. Mit einer Einführung von Christopher Bollas und einer Replik von Jacqueline Rose
    • Genese der Persönlichkeit

      • 285 Seiten
      • 10 Lesestunden

      Das Modell der Objektbeziehungstheorie erweist sich in diesem Buch als ein überzeugendes Instrumentarium, um psychische Fehlentwicklungen bei Patienten besser verstehen und behandeln zu können. Er entfaltet seine Erkenntnisse an Fallbeispielen aus seiner praktischen therapeutischen Erfahrung mit homosexuellen Cruisern, Čutterinnen, die sich selbst an verschiedenen Körperteilen durch Schnitte verstümmeln, oder auch mit der Persönlichkeitsstruktur politischer Extremisten.

      Genese der Persönlichkeit
    • Wenn die Sonne zerbricht

      Das Rätsel Schizophrenie

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      Wenn die Sonne zerbricht
    • Die unendliche Frage

      Zur Bedeutung des freien Assoziierens. Deutsche Originalausgabe. Erschienen 2009 bei Routledge unter dem Titel: The Infinite Question

      Die unendliche Frage
    • The Christopher Bollas Reader

      • 312 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden
      4,6(19)Abgeben

      The collection features influential writings by Christopher Bollas, showcasing his significant contributions to psychoanalysis and the understanding of the human psyche. It explores themes such as the nature of the self, the interplay between language and emotion, and the therapeutic process. Bollas's insights challenge conventional perspectives, making this reader an essential resource for those interested in psychoanalytic theory and practice.

      The Christopher Bollas Reader
    • In this exploration of a radical approach to the psychoanalytical treatment of people on the verge of mental breakdown, Christopher Bollas offers a new and courageous clinical paradigm. He suggests that the unconscious purpose of breakdown is to present the self to the other for transformative understanding; to have its core distress met and understood directly. If caught in time, a breakdown can become a breakthrough. It is an event imbued with the most profound personal significance, but it requires deep understanding if its meaning is to be released to its transformative potential. Bollas believes that hospitalization, intensive medication and CBT/DBT all negate this opportunity, and he proposes that many of these patients should instead be offered extended, intensive psychoanalysis. This book will be of interest to clinicians who find that, with patients on the verge of breakdown, conventional psychoanalytical work is insufficient to meet the emerging crisis. However, Bollas’s challenging proposal will provoke many questions and in the final section of the book some of these are raised by Sacha Bollas and presented in a question-and-answer form.

      Catch Them Before They Fall: The Psychoanalysis of Breakdown
    • Hysteria

      • 208 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden
      4,4(35)Abgeben

      The book presents a unique theory of hysteria, integrating its classic characteristics such as repressed sexual thoughts, emotional detachment from symptoms, and a profound identification with others. By exploring these elements, the author sheds new light on the complexities of the hysteric experience, offering fresh insights into its psychological underpinnings.

      Hysteria
    • In Being a Character, Christopher Bollas argued that Freud's vision of the dream process is a model for all unconscious mental experience. In Cracking Up he extends his exploration of the inner world of human experience and suggests that the rhythm of that experience is vital to individual creativity. It allows us to develop what the author calls a 'separate sense', which we use to assess the meanings of our own experiences and also to attune ourselves sympathetically to the lives of other people. In this original and thought-provoking book, Bollas examines how people educate one another in the idioms of their unconscious lives and considers the nature and consequences of the traumas that inhibit the freedom to do this. He studies what we mean by the past - is it unchangeable or can history be a creative, open understanding of experience? We come to know who we are by giving form and meaning to our past - yet what do we mean by the self? Bollas' answer suggests yet more ways in which the 'separate sense' expresses each person's unique qualities.

      Cracking Up