Symbolization

Representation and Communication

James Rose author James Rose editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd

Published:31st Dec '07

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Symbolization cover

'Because psychoanalysis is a science of subjectivity, it is no surprise that symbolism has been of central interest from its inception and early development. There are few phenomena more obviously subjective than symbols. They conjure a particular fascination because of their enigmatic quality. For this reason, they manage to communicate something in an obscure manner. Thus, they partly hide. This duality and ambiguity approaches the fl eeting and evanescent quality of subjectivity itself: at its most subjective.'Thinking in this descriptive way is not the most immediately helpful approach to understanding symbols as phenomena because it omits immediate consideration of how symbols are formed and how they are used by the individual and the groups that seem to form around them. Initially, the promise of symbols to the pioneers of psychoanalysis was based on their offering an access to the unconscious. Like dreams - and manifest in dreams - they promised to be part of the royal road to the unconscious.'This book is therefore assembled in such a way that the reader can trace the development of the understanding of symbols and their formation and use in its historical context and to try to look at their clinical signifi cance. This is in the hope that the book will be of relevance and use in the practical sense as well as the theoretical.'- James Rose, from the Introduction

The author approached this task by thinking about two issues. The first concerns what might force an individual subject to use symbols as means of communication. He is interested in the possibility that symbols are developed as part of the means of managing the inevitable and unavoidable anxiety of change. Change-or its prospect-is itself equally unavoidable because we cannot know the future. The author then looks at the development of symbols as a means of communication through the use of the setting. This concerns thinking about experience that is initially unrepresentable and to observe how that experience becomes represented in the psychoanalytic setting. The particular experience he chose was a sense of nothingness because it is by definition both subjective and unrepresentable. Contents1 Introduction: symbols - on their formation and use2 A connection between a symbol and a symptom by Freud S. 3 Triangulation, one's own mind and objectivity by Cavell M.4 Symbols and their function in managing the anxiety of change by Rose J. S.5 A Psychoanalytic view of perception by Botella C. and Botella S. 6 A clinical paradox of absence in the transference: how some patients create a virtual object to communicate an experience by Rose J.S. 7 Observing patients' use of the psychoanalytic setting to communicate an experience of absence: the work of progressive triangulation by Rose J.S. 8 Some conclusions

ISBN: 9781855755901

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

160 pages