ABSTRACT

This fascinating and highly original book presents a longitudinal systematic study of the earliest form of human dreaming in a child, from ages 4 through 10.

Claudio Colace draws upon his extensive research on children’s dreams, his expertise in brain science and an intimate knowledge of a single subject, his son Marco, to demonstrate the validity of an ontogenetic approach to the understanding of dream processes. The availability of ‘first-hand’ information about the daytime experiences of the author’s son in relation to dream contents, as well as the longitudinal approach of the study, prove to be useful for a qualitative in-depth analysis of the nature and function of infantile dreams and of the changes that occur in the dreaming process as the child grows, from the early forms to more complex ones. Affirming the significance of Freud’s explorations of infantile dreaming, this book attests to the nature of dreaming as a meaningful psychic act rather than the result of random processes.

Expanding beyond a purely psychotherapeutic context, the book analyzes the development of dreams systematically and in relation to Freud’s theories on the human mind, making it an important read for clinicians, scholars and researchers interested in dream functions, child development and psychodynamic theory.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|16 pages

Methodological aspects of the study

chapter Chapter 1|6 pages

The credibility of children's dream reports

chapter Chapter 2|8 pages

The methodology of this study

part II|49 pages

The debut of dreaming activity

part III|54 pages

The decline of infantile forms of dreaming (ages 6 to 7)

chapter Chapter 10|9 pages

Bad dreams

chapter Chapter 11|10 pages

Ego and superego development and changes in dreaming

part IV|41 pages

Dreaming in middle childhood (ages 8 to 10)

chapter Chapter 13|14 pages

Dream distortion and new dream-work operations

chapter Chapter 14|6 pages

Changes in bad dreams

part V|66 pages

The meaning and function of infantile dreams

chapter Chapter 15|22 pages

The function of dreams

The affective-reestablishment (AR) hypothesis

chapter Chapter 16|15 pages

Infantile forms of dreaming in adults

chapter |2 pages

Conclusion