Advances in Neuropsychoanalysis,Attachment Theory,and Trauma Research: Implications for Self Psychology |
| |
Authors: | Allan N. Schore Ph.D. |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine;2. UCLA Center for Culture, Brain, and Development, the Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis;3. Southern California Psychoanalytic Institute , Los Angeles |
| |
Abstract: | In 1971, Heinz Kohut, trained in neurology and then psychoanalysis, published The Analysis of the Self, a detailed exposition of the central role of the self in human existence. This classic volume of both twentieth century psychoanalysis and psychology was more than a collection of various clinical observations—rather it represented an overarching integrated theory of the development, structuralization, psychopathogenesis, and psychotherapy of disorders of the self. Although some of these ideas were elaborations of previous psychoanalytic principles, a large number of his concepts, including an emphasis on self rather than ego, signified an innovative departure from mainstream psychoanalysis and yet a truly creative addition to Freud's theory. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|