5 results match your criteria: "Tel Aviv Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis[Affiliation]"
Int J Psychoanal
August 2023
Baerwald School of Social Work, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.
In this paper, the authors explore the depiction of perversion and the associated interplay of life and death drives in Roman Polanski's 1992 film . To begin with, a theoretical discussion is presented regarding perverse organizations of mastery and sadomasochism. Perversion is viewed as an expression of the death drive under erotic disguise, in which the destructive fingerprint of the death drive is revealed at every stage, having as its ultimate purpose the destruction of the other.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Psychoanal
August 2022
Tel Aviv Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis, Tel-Aviv, Israel.
The aim of this paper is to distinguish between conscious and unconscious conceptions of objects. I will argue that we consciously ascribe different properties to the same object based on their coexistence in time and space. For example, the colour and flavour of an apple are ascribed to the same object as they relate to the same spatiotemporal location.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Psychoanal
February 2022
Tel Aviv Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis, Tel Aviv, Israel.
This paper illuminates how the psychoanalytic work of Winnicott and Wittgenstein's philosophy on language complement each other in elucidating a "psychoanalytic language game". The paper takes a close look at the grammar and linguistic mechanisms which underlie psychoanalytic work. Wittgenstein's linguistic turn from positivism is discussed; his ideas like 'family resemblance', 'aspect seeing' and 'language games' are examined in order to shed light on the paradoxical communication at play in Winnicott's potential space.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article weaves together two threads: the intricacies of the analysis of a difficult-to-reach yet extraordinary patient and the literary works of Jorge Luis Borges, which played a significant role in the analysis as a source of inspiration, enriching the analyst's reverie and opening up new psychic spaces. The authors demonstrate the analyst's recourse to several of Borges's stories in order to enrich his own inner world and to better understand the analysand. Some of these stories are briefly presented through the analyst's dialogue with them, and there is a discussion of their function in facilitating the process of working through issues of time, memory, mortality, and identity, contributing to the enhancement of the patient's ability to come face to face with the unwanted, split-off parts of his self and of reality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Psychother
September 2003
Department of Psychology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis, Israel.
This paper investigates the psychological consequences of a social ethos that has emerged in the 1990s; the Bourgeois Bohemian (in short, Bobo) that claims that the bourgeois striving for financial success and status can be reconciled with the Bohemian striving for creative self-expression. An extended case history shows how a man in his thirties grappled with the inherent complexity and contradictions of the Bobo ethos. The question is raised how, as psychotherapists, we can deal with the individual patient's search for a good life amidst the growing pressure of the Bobo ethos, to get the best of all possible lives, the combination of authenticity and success.
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