ABSTRACT

How are the implicit memory and the unrepressed unconscious related?

Feeling the Words incorporates a thorough review of essential psychoanalytic concepts, a clear critical history of analytical ideas and an assessment of the contribution neuroscience has to offer.

Mauro Mancia uses numerous detailed clinical examples to demonstrate how insights from neuroscience and infant development research can change how the analyst responds to his or her patient. Major topics such as the transference, the Oedipus complex, the interpretation of dreams and the nature of mental pain are reviewed and refined in the light of these recent developments. The book is divided into three parts, covering:

  • Memory and the unconscious
  • The dream: between neuroscience and psychoanalysis
  • Further reflections on narcissism and other clinical topics

Feeling the Words offers an original perspective on the connection between memory and the unconscious. It will be welcomed by all psychoanalysts interested in investigating new ways of working with patients.

chapter |27 pages

Introduction: Beyond Freud

The twilight of Oedipus and the neurosciences' contribution to psychoanalysis

part One|50 pages

Memory and the unconscious

chapter 2|12 pages

Implicit memory and unrepressed unconscious

Their role in creativity, in the transference and in dreams

part Two|34 pages

The dream

chapter 4|7 pages

The labyrinth of the night

Biology, poetry and theology

chapter 5|13 pages

The dream

Between neuroscience and psychoanalysis

chapter 6|12 pages

The dream

A window onto the transference

part Three|106 pages

Further reflections on narcissism and other clinical topics

chapter 8|20 pages

Being with the patient

Four clinical cases

chapter 9|26 pages

Reality and metaphor in the analytical relation

Transference love

chapter 10|13 pages

Sexuality, such sweet folly

chapter 11|7 pages

On happiness

chapter 12|9 pages

On mental pain