Agieren as Retroaction and Agieren for Retroaction
Zilkha, Nathalie
Agieren as Retroaction and Agieren for Retroaction - 2010.
87
Acting out as deferred action, acting out for deferred action Developing the hypothesis that acting out (agieren) is to repetition what screen-memory is to recollection, bringing together elements of a different nature and temporality, the author explores various functions of acting out for deferred action, starting from Freud's text ? Two lies told by children ?. She proposes a distinction between ? acting out as deferred action ?, which may be confused with the occurrence of deferred action, from ? acting out for deferred action ?, in which acted-out repetition helps to create a scene that will serve the retroactive process. She questions the deferred action of psychic processes that do not automatically entail any presentation, such as narcissistic identifications.
Agieren as Retroaction and Agieren for Retroaction - 2010.
87
Acting out as deferred action, acting out for deferred action Developing the hypothesis that acting out (agieren) is to repetition what screen-memory is to recollection, bringing together elements of a different nature and temporality, the author explores various functions of acting out for deferred action, starting from Freud's text ? Two lies told by children ?. She proposes a distinction between ? acting out as deferred action ?, which may be confused with the occurrence of deferred action, from ? acting out for deferred action ?, in which acted-out repetition helps to create a scene that will serve the retroactive process. She questions the deferred action of psychic processes that do not automatically entail any presentation, such as narcissistic identifications.
Réseaux sociaux