000 02328cam a2200397 4500500
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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aDowd, Amanda
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aVanishing acts: The crisis of our loss of kinship with the more-than-human world
260 _c2024.
500 _a99
520 _aIn this paper, the author is arguing for the recognition of the implicit structural and emotional links between the development of mind and psyche and the more-than-human world. She suggests that it is because of this interpenetration that the uncanny experience of displacement anxiety and its effects on our capacities to think and make links is an under-appreciated aspect of our constant ‘forgetting’ of the building syndrome of our Earth’s symptomatology. She makes use of her own theory of ‘organizing gestalt’ and the thinking of Maturana, Ingold and Colman to offer a framework for the consideration of the uncanny links between what we know about vanishing biodiversity, broken ecosystems and the breaking down of previously integrated Earth systems and the breaking down of our ways of thinking about our relationships with the more-than-human world. She suggests that, taken together, such a framework feels remarkably akin to Australian indigenous ways of being in the world. Finally, she asks the question, what might it mean to think ecologically in our psychoanalytic work?
690 _aEcological interactions
690 _aCorrespondence
690 _aCultural complex
690 _aContainer-contained
690 _aExtended mind –Kinship
690 _aOrganizing gestalt
690 _aUncanny
690 _aStructural coupling
690 _aUncertainty
690 _aDisplacement anxi-etyc
690 _aEcological interactions
690 _aCorrespondence
690 _aCultural complex
690 _aContainer-contained
690 _aExtended mind –Kinship
690 _aOrganizing gestalt
690 _aUncanny
690 _aStructural coupling
690 _aUncertainty
690 _aDisplacement anxi-etyc
786 0 _nCahiers jungiens de psychanalyse | 159 | 1 | 2024-06-25 | p. 7-32 | 0984-8207
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-cahiers-jungiens-de-psychanalyse-2024-1-page-7?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c457411
_d457411