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Envy and Gratitude

In Envy and Gratitude and Other Works 1946-1963. The Free Press (1975)

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  1. The I of the storm: Relations between self and conscious emotion experience: Comment on lambie and Marcel (2002).Tim Dalgleish & Michael J. Power - 2004 - Psychological Review 111 (3):812-819.
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  • Postscript: Self-constructs versus personalities--A semantic red herring?Tim Dalgleish & Michael J. Power - 2004 - Psychological Review 111 (3):818-819.
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  • Julia Kristeva: Psychoanalysis and Modernity.Sara Beardsworth - 2004 - State University of New York Press.
    A comprehensive examination of Kristeva's work from the seventies to the nineties.
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  • Democracy and human nature: a layered system analysis.Carl Auerbach - 2023 - Journal of Critical Realism 22 (5):882-903.
    This paper addresses a question posed by the increase of democratic backsliding: whether democracy itself is compatible with human nature. It analyses democracy as a layered system consisting of three levels: the political/institutional, the social/interactional and the psychological/intrapsychic. At each level it uses evolutionary theory to describes features of a ‘light side’ of human nature that makes democracy possible, and of a ‘dark side’ of human nature that leads to democratic backsliding. At the political/institutional level these features are the reduction (...)
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  • The Symbolic Order of the Mother.Luisa Muraro, Francesca Novello & Alison Stone - 2017 - SUNY Press.
    Argues that affirming the irreducible differences between men and women can lead to more transformative politics than the struggle for abstract equality between the sexes. In The Symbolic Order of the Mother Luisa Muraro identifies the bond between mother and child as ontologically fundamental to the development of culture and politics, and therefore as key to achieving truly emancipatory political change. Both corporeal development and language acquisition, which are the sources of all thinking, begin in this relationship. However, Western civilization (...)
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  • Self-negation.Mustafa Emirbayer - 2024 - Theory and Society 53 (2):323-356.
    This paper presents a new approach to theorizing and empirically investigating a phenomenon variously described by sociologists as internalized oppression or symbolic violence. Located at the intersection of internal worlds and external reality, the intrapsychic and the interpersonal and social, this object of inquiry—here termed self-negation—is crucial to many forms of societal domination. The paper explores its inner workings, analytically disaggregating it into an array of psychosocial processes drawn from the psychoanalytic theory of the defenses. Much of the work’s originality (...)
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  • Pathology and pain, disease and disability: The burdens of the body in the Book of Job peering through a psychoanalytic prism.Pieter van der Zwan - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (4):1-8.
    Not only trauma, mourning and disease, but also disability has been recognised in the Book of Job in which the body plays an exceptional role. The protagonist is suffering physically, psychically and spiritually. Although the word, •–• [be sick, ill], never occurs in the book, his body is portrayed negatively being afflicted by some unknown illness, which would probably exclude him from the community described in Leviticus 13-14. While •’—’—“ [be silent] occurs several times in the book, it never has (...)
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  • From Negation to Disjunction in a World of Simulacra: Deleuze and Melanie Klein.Nathan Widder - 2009 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 3 (2):207-230.
    This paper will articulate an underappreciated side of the psychoanalytical Deleuze: his relation to Melanie Klein, particularly as it appears in The Logic of Sense. Deleuze's engagement with Klein largely follows his familiar strategy of re-reading a thinker off of a twist in one or two of that thinker's key concepts. With Klein, this twist involves re-reading her story of psychic development on the basis of disjunction rather than negation, so that the psychic surface that emerges generates a persistent non-correspondence (...)
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  • Pathology and pain, disease and disability: The burdens of the body in the Book of Job peering through a psychoanalytic prism.Pieter van der Zwan - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (1):8.
    Not only trauma, mourning and disease, but also disability has been recognised in the Book of Job in which the body plays an exceptional role. The protagonist is suffering physically, psychically and spiritually. Although the word, חלה [be sick, ill], never occurs in the book, his body is portrayed negatively being afflicted by some unknown illness, which would probably exclude him from the community described in Leviticus 13–14. While חָרֵשׁ [be silent] occurs several times in the book, it never has (...)
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  • Pathology and pain, disease and disability: The burdens of the body in the Book of Job peering through a psychoanalytic prism.Pieter van der Zwan - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (4):1–8.
    Not only trauma, mourning and disease, but also disability has been recognised in the Book of Job in which the body plays an exceptional role. The protagonist is suffering physically, psychically and spiritually. Although the word, •–• [be sick, ill], never occurs in the book, his body is portrayed negatively being afflicted by some unknown illness, which would probably exclude him from the community described in Leviticus 13-14. While •’—’—“ [be silent] occurs several times in the book, it never has (...)
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  • Empathy, caring and compassion: Toward a Freudian critique of nursing work.Michael Traynor - 2023 - Nursing Philosophy 24 (1):e12399.
    The aim of this paper is to summarize key psychoanalytic concepts first developed by Sigmund Freud and apply them to a critical exploration of three terms that are central to nursing's self‐image—empathy, caring, and compassion. Looking to Menzies‐Lyth's work, I suggest that the nurse's strong identification as a carer can be understood as a fantasy of being the one who is cared for; critiques by Freud and others of empathy point to the possibility of it being, in reality, a form (...)
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  • Interpreting the Nahuat Dialogue on the Envious Dead with Jerome Bruner's Theory of Narrative.James M. Taggart - 2012 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 40 (4):411-430.
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  • Reparation and the Gift.Michele Stephen - 2000 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 28 (2):119-146.
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  • How a therapist survives the suicide of a patient—with a special focus on patients with psychosis.Borut Skodlar & Claudia Welz - 2013 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 12 (1):235-246.
    The article draws from a personal clinical experience of two suicides, not far removed from each other in time. The first patient was a 33-year-old intellectual suffering from depression with narcissistic traits but no psychotic elements, while the second patient was a 21-year-old student with a manifest psychotic episode behind him and with characteristics of post-psychotic depression at the time of suicide. The two suicides had very different impacts on the therapist: the first left open some “space” for reflection, communication, (...)
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  • How Infants Grow Mothers in North London.Daniel Miller - 1997 - Theory, Culture and Society 14 (4):67-88.
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  • Empty Time as Traumatic Duration: Towards a Cinematic Aevum.Kelli Fuery - 2020 - Film-Philosophy 24 (2):204-221.
    Frank Kermode uses the term aevum to question the links between origin, order, and time, associating experience with spatial form. Without end or beginning, aevum identifies an intersubjective order of time where we participate in the “relation between the fictions by which we order our world and the increasing complexity of what we take to be the ‘real’ history of that world”; being “in-between” time is a primary quality of the aevum. Regarding cinema, aevum identifies this third duration as emotional (...)
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  • Group Relations Consulting: Voice Notes from Robben Island.Aden-Paul Flotman - 2018 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 18 (1):41-52.
    Group process consultants use themselves as instruments of intervention at the micro, meso and macro levels, and therefore need to have a deep sense of personal self-awareness and self-regulation as they serve as complex dynamic containers of group consultation processes. In this paper, I proceed from an ethnographic perspective to describe, reflect on and explore my emotional and cognitive lived experiences as consultant to participants’ diversity encounters during a Robben Island Diversity Experience (RIDE) event in South Africa. Nineteen participants attended (...)
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