000 02138naaaa2200277uu 4500
001 https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/70872
005 20220219182542.0
020 _a9789461664174
020 _a9789058677549
024 7 _a10.11116/9789461664174
_cdoi
041 0 _aEnglish
042 _adc
072 7 _aMMJT
_2bicssc
100 1 _aWesterink, Herman
_4auth
245 1 0 _aA Dark Trace : Sigmund Freud on the Sense of Guilt
260 _aLeuven
_bLeuven University Press
_c2021
300 _a1 electronic resource (320 p.)
506 0 _aOpen Access
_2star
_fUnrestricted online access
520 _aSigmund Freud, in his search for the origins of the sense of guilt in individual life and culture, regularly speaks of “reading a dark trace”, thus referring to the Oedipus myth as a myth on the problem of human guilt. The sense of guilt is indeed a trace that leads deep into the individual’s mental life, into his childhood life, and into the prehistory of culture and religion. In this book this trace is followed and thus Freud’s thought on the sense of guilt as a central issue in his work is analyzed, from the earliest studies on the moral and “guilty” characters of the hysterics, via the later complex differentiations in the concept of the sense of guilt, unto the analyses of civilization’s discontents and Jewish sense of guilt. The sense of guilt is a key issue in Freudian psychoanalysis, not only in relation to other key concepts in psychoanalytic theory, but also in relation to debates with others, such as Carl Gustav Jung or Melanie Klein, Freud was engaged in.
540 _aCreative Commons
_fhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
_2cc
_4https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
546 _aEnglish
650 7 _aPsychotherapy
_2bicssc
653 _aFreud; psychoanalysis; sense of guilt
856 4 0 _awww.oapen.org
_uhttps://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/49617/1/9789461664174.pdf
_70
_zDOAB: download the publication
856 4 0 _awww.oapen.org
_uhttps://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/70872
_70
_zDOAB: description of the publication
999 _c35220
_d35220