Artigo Revisado por pares

The return of the prodigal: the emergence of Jungian themes in post‐Freudian thought

1999; Wiley; Volume: 44; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/1465-5922.00084

ISSN

1468-5922

Autores

Barbara D. Stephens,

Tópico(s)

Psychotherapy Techniques and Applications

Resumo

Stories about reality and the nature of truth constitute the essence of psychological theory. This paper is an overview of the various Jungian‐sounding ‘storylines’ that have slowly been woven into the fabric of Freudian theory, that is, those broad ranges of therapeutic approaches labelled ‘psychoanalytic’. These include: hegemony of subjective experience; centrality of the Subject; the ineffable nature of the Subject and its agency; the role of countertransference as primary data in analysis; autonomous structures in the psyche; the nature and function of symbols; desire and its purposiveness; the nature and transformative aspects of primitive affective states. Speculation on the reasons for this occurrence is not considered as merely a function of enlightened theoretical or fraternal interchange, but of an archetypal dynamic of exclusion and reconciliation inherent in the nature of theory building and illustrated by the biblical myth of the prodigal.

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