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005 20250121122407.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aAlfandary, Isabelle
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aWriting psychoanalysis: A Freudian method
260 _c2023.
500 _a80
520 _aThe experience of the unconscious and its transmission are inseparable from the experience of writing. Freud was not indifferent to writing: it involved both conveying his discoveries about the unconscious and re-examining them at the same time; both feeling their powerful and disconcerting effects and developing them. Freud’s writing is the laboratory of the emerging Freudian science, the place where the analyst encounters and confronts the otherness of the unconscious, of the Other, as well as that of the imaginary other, the reader. In the cases of both “Dora” and the “Wolf Man,” the unconscious emerges, is elucidated, and is wrestled with in the very process of writing.
690 _awriting
690 _aWolf Man
690 _atransference
690 _acase writing
690 _aDora
690 _awriting
690 _aWolf Man
690 _atransference
690 _acase writing
690 _aDora
786 0 _nRevue française de psychosomatique | o 62 | 2 | 2023-02-03 | p. 121-132 | 1164-4796
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-francaise-de-psychosomatique-2022-2-page-121?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c556900
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