It is characteristic of a trauma that the subject cannot process and symbolically represent the traumatic experience. With Lacan's theory of 'the real', the traumatic experience is understood as one of being overwhelmed by a . In developmental terms, I refer to a (birth) and the subject's . It manifests itself during childhood in transitions from one ontological constitution to another that are necessitated by internal or external changes. Such transitions involve the child's on his primary objects, and they require from them. This also applies to the child's , as his primary objects must react appropriately to his constitution , so that he can feel existentially affirmed by them in his being. The adult, also, is reliant on knowing that he is affirmed as a human being in his existence, which can be experienced in the of the other. Metaphorically speaking, this also applies to the gaze and behaviour of the natural and technological environment, which can transform, like a personal object, into a traumatic monstrous quasi-object. The paper concludes with a clinical vignette in which the emergence and transformation of a monstrous quasi-object is illustrated in the treatment of a female patient suffering from severe early traumata.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00207578.2019.1703341 | DOI Listing |
Int J Psychoanal
December 2019
German Psychoanalytic Association (DPV), Mannheim, Germany.
It is characteristic of a trauma that the subject cannot process and symbolically represent the traumatic experience. With Lacan's theory of 'the real', the traumatic experience is understood as one of being overwhelmed by a . In developmental terms, I refer to a (birth) and the subject's .
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