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      On Freud's “Screen Memories”
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      Book

      On Freud's “Screen Memories”

      DOI link for On Freud's “Screen Memories”

      On Freud's “Screen Memories” book

      On Freud's “Screen Memories”

      DOI link for On Freud's “Screen Memories”

      On Freud's “Screen Memories” book

      Edited ByGail S. Reed, Howard B. Levine
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2015
      eBook Published 23 May 2019
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429477881
      Pages 224
      eBook ISBN 9780429477881
      Subjects Behavioral Sciences
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      Reed, G.S., & Levine, H.B. (Eds.). (2015). On Freud's “Screen Memories” (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429477881

      ABSTRACT

      The concept of "screen memories" was introduced by Freud for the first time in his 1899 paper, reprinted here in its entirety. Although the clinical interest in "screen memories" has perhaps diminished in recent analytic discussion, there is much to be gained from revisiting and re-examining both the phenomenon and Freud's original paper within a contemporary context. To this end, the authors have invited contributions from eight leading psychoanalysts on the current meaning and value to them of the screen memory concept. These comments come from contemporary psychoanalysts practicing in Italy, Francophone Switzerland, Argentina, Israel, and the United States of America, each of whom has been trained in one or another of a variety of psychoanalytic traditions, among which are ego psychology, a French version of Freud, an American version of Lacan and at least two variants of Kleinian thought - one British and one Latin American.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      part 1|24 pages

      “Screen memories” (1899a)

      part 2|167 pages

      Discussion of “Screen memories”

      chapter 1|9 pages

      Screen memories: a reintroduction

      ByGail S. Reed, Howard B. Levine

      chapter 2|22 pages

      The screen memory and the act of remembering*

      ByLucy LaFarge

      chapter 3|22 pages

      Screen memories: the faculty of memory and the importance of the patient’s history

      ByFranco De Masi

      chapter 4|24 pages

      The screen and behind it: manifest and latent themes in Freud’s Über Deckerinnerungen 1

      ByRivka R. Eifermann

      chapter 5|14 pages

      The waning of screen memories: from the Age of Neuroses to an Autistoid Age

      ByJorge L. Ahumada

      chapter 6|17 pages

      “Screen memories” revisited

      ByShlomith Cohen

      chapter 7|15 pages

      Reading Freud’s semiotic passion

      ByJohn P. Muller

      chapter 8|22 pages

      Phyllis Greenacre: screen memories and reconstruction

      ByNellie Thompson

      chapter 9|13 pages

      Screen memories today: a neuropsychoanalytic essay of definition

      ByFlorence Guignard

      chapter 10|7 pages

      Some final thoughts on memory and screen memory

      ByHoward B. Levine, Gail S. Reed
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