Understanding infants psychoanalytically : a post-Jungian perspective on Michael Fordham's model of development
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Bibliographic Information
Understanding infants psychoanalytically : a post-Jungian perspective on Michael Fordham's model of development
Routledge, 2022
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Content Type: text (rdacontent), Media Type: unmediated (rdamedia), Carrier Type: volume (rdacarrier)
Includes bibliographical references and index
Summary: "Focussing on infants and the relationship between child and parent, this book presents a discourse on eminent Jungian child analyst Michael Fordham's model of development that extended Jung's theory to infancy and childhood"-- Provided by publisher
Description and Table of Contents
Description
- there is currently little literature on Fordham so this book will fill a gap, particularly as it is so aptly clinically orientated - will be especially popular in Britain, where Fordham originated
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part I: Theory
- 1: The primary self and related concepts in Jung, Klein and Isaacs
- 2: Infant observation, experimental infant research and psychodynamic theory regarding lack of self/other differentiation
- Part II: Explications
- 3: Out of the mouths of babes: an enquiry into the sources of language development
- 4: 'With healing in her wings ...': integration and repair in a self-destructive adolescent
- 5: Developmental aspects of trauma and traumatic aspects of development
- Part III: Extensions
- 6: Fordham, Jung and the self: a re-examination of Fordham's contribution to Jung 's conceptualisation
- 7: The 'self' in analytical psychology: the function of the 'central archetype' within Fordham's model
- 8: Reflections on research and learning from the patient: the art and science of what we do
- Appendix Elizabeth Urban - list of publications
by "Nielsen BookData"