Redirected from Psychoanalytic theory
Psychoanalysis is the revelation of unconscious relations, that a person might not be aware of, in a systematic way through an associative process.
Psychoanalysis was first devised in Vienna in the 1890s by Sigmund Freud, a doctor interested in finding an effective treatment for patients with neurotic or hysterical symptoms[?]. As a result of talking with these patients Freud came to believe that their problems stemmed from culturally unacceptable, thus repressed and unconscious desires and fantasies of a sexual nature. Since Freud's day psychoanalysis has developed in many ways, and there are various different schools as well.
The basic method of psychoanalyis is free association. The patient, in a relaxed posture, is directed to say whatever comes into his or her mind. Dreams, hopes, wishes, fantasies are of interest, as are recollections of early family life. Generally the analyst simply listens, making comments only when, in his or her professional judgement, an opportunity for insight on the part of the patient arises.
Although psychoanalytic techniques have been successfully used to treat psychosis in a few cases (with great effort and major sacrifice on the part of the analyst), psychoanalysis is generally useful only in cases of neurosis and with character problems. In fact, it is often thought that patients with schizophrenia do not have the mental resources necessary for the strenuous and often drawn-out analytic process.
Psychoanalysis is:
Today psychoanlytic ideas are imbedded in the culture, especially in child care, education, literary criticism, and in psychiatry, particularly medical and non-medical psychotherapy. Though there is a mainstream of evolved analytic ideas, there are groups who more specifically follow the precepts of one or more of the later theoreticians.--
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