Hysteria from Freud to Lacan: Body and Language in Psychoanalysis |
Contents
Hysterical Conversion and Biological Metaphors for Pleasure I | 1 |
CHAPTER I | 17 |
CHAPTER 2 | 64 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
anxiety articulation aspect autoeroticism blushing bodily positions body of jouissance castration cathected cathexis conceptualize constitutes Darstellung David-Ménard defined desire dimension of movement discharge discourse disgust Dora Dora's dream elaboration element Elisabeth's energetistic epistemological erotic erotogenic body experience expression fact fantasy father Felix Deutsch Fliess Freud's text Freudian function genital Herr K.'s hysteric's hysterical conversion hysterical symptoms hysterogenic identified imaginary instinct involved Jacques Lacan jouis jouissance lack Landauer language libido Lou Andreas-Salomé Lucy's masturbation masturbatory Melanie Klein ment metaphor metonymic motor excitation notion object oral organic pain patient penis perception physiological play pleasure principle pleasure-body precisely presupposes problem psychical psychoanalysis question reality relation remains represent representation Sadger sance scenario scene scotomization sensation sense sensory sexual difference sexual jouissance Sigmund Freud signifying somatic specific Studies on Hysteria symbolizing conversion Tausk term terrain theory of hysteria thought tion transformed unconscious Wilhelm Fliess