A Structuralist Approach in Psychiatry : Uncanny and Desire in Psychosis

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A Structuralist Approach in Psychiatry : Uncanny and Desire in Psychosis

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 184 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781041031055

Full Description

A Structuralist Approach in Psychiatry presents an alternative view of the psychiatric patient and highlights a connection with continental post-structuralist thinking to provide a new approach to psychiatry.

After outlining the problems facing psychiatry, and the historical development of the field, this book outlines a structuralist model of the subject that does greater justice to the complexity involved while avoiding physicalist reductionism. It draws heavily on French structuralism, in which language plays a central structuring role that also influences the subject. The author draws on the works of Foucault, Lacan, and Bergson, as well as Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Žižek. The structuralist model proposed engages with the intricate relationships between the Real, the Imaginary, and the Symbolic in relation to the subject, particularly in the marginality of psychosis. Three clinical examples are provided to illustrate this: the syndromes of Cotard, Capgras, and negative hallucination. These examples demonstrate how the negative within the subject manifests itself in their symptomatology. However, the negative also plays a role in the normal development of the subject when they encounter the Symbolic and enter the world of language. Time and again, the subject must reinvent themselves through speech. This model, grounded in the concept of the zero point, has implications for an alternative anthropology and for psychiatry, where speaking and listening take centre stage.

This book will be of interest to mental healthcare professionals, including psychiatric nurses, psychiatrists, psychologists, and physician assistants, and those studying to enter these professions.

Contents

Part one Positioning of modern psychiatry

Chapter 1. Outline of the problem facing psychiatry

Chapter 2. Historical development of Psychiatry from the Enlightenment

Part two Structuralism and nothingness

Chapter 3. Structuralism

Chapter 4. Fundamental Impossibilities

Chapter 5. Nothingness and Science

Chapter 6. Nothingness as creative moment

Part three Three Experiences of Nothingness in the Clinic

Chapter 7. As in a black mirror; Cotard's syndrome

Chapter 8. The Stranger in ourselves; Capgras Syndrome

Chapter 9. Experience of Nothingness

Part four Towards a Different Perspective of the Subject

Chapter 10. Subject and Science

Chapter 11. Looking for the Psyche in Psychiatry

Chapter 12. Sketch of an Alternative

Part five The Creative Power of Nothingness

Chapter 13. Friedrich Nietzsche and Degree Zero of Morality

Chapter 14. Interlude, Fable

Chapter 15. Martin Heidegger and Nothingness

Chapter 16. Nothingness at Jacques Lacan

Chapter 17. Slavoj Žižek: Can it be Less than Nothing?

Chapter 18. Genealogy of Creation

Chapter 19. Towards a Structuralist Psychiatry

Chapter 20. The Role of Linguistics in a Therapeutic Perspective

Chapter 21. The Eclipse of the (Psychotic) Subject?

Chapter 22. What about the Self?

Part six To Resist the Death Instinct of Nothingness

Chapter 23. An Object Relations Theory without an Object

Chapter 24. Psychiatry and the Transcendental

Chapter 25. The Ethical Implications of Mysticism and Desire

Chapter 26. The Subject as a Dynamic Process: From Deadlock to Transformation-Symbolisation as a Response to Nothingness

Chapter 27. Everything or Nothing-About Mysticism and the Genesis of the Subject

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