Results 71 to 80 of about 183,810 (286)

The Savage Worlds of Henry Drummond (1851–1897): Science, Racism and Religion in the Work of a Popular Evolutionist

open access: yesJournal of Religious History, EarlyView.
Abstract The savage was a familiar as well as deeply problematic figure in late‐Victorian literary and scientific imaginaries. Savages provided an unstable but capacious and flexible signifier to explore human development and human difference, most often in ways that followed a disturbing racial logic.
Diarmid A. Finnegan
wiley   +1 more source

LACANIAN UNCONSIOUS IN DYLAN THOMAS \"ELEGY\" AND \"IN MY CRAFT OR SULLEN ART\" [PDF]

open access: yes, 2012
LACANIAN UNCONSIOUS IN DYLAN THOMAS \"ELEGY\" AND \"IN MY CRAFT OR SULLEN ART\" - Psychoanalysis, Unconscious, Dylan Thomas, Metaphor ...
KRISTIANTI, YOAN, Retnowati, Retnowati
core  

The democratic origins of the term "group analysis": Karl Mannheim's "third way" for psychoanalysis and social science. [PDF]

open access: yes, 2003
It is well known that Foulkes acknowledged Karl Mannheim as the first to use the term ‘group analysis’. However, Mannheim’s work is otherwise not well known. This article examines the foundations of Mannheim’s sociological interest in groups using the
Bottomore, T.B.   +25 more
core   +1 more source

Virility, fascism and regeneration in post‐Civil War Spain: On interpretations of literary Romanticism under the Franco regime

open access: yesGender &History, EarlyView.
Abstract In the years immediately following the Spanish Civil War, the political culture of Falangism developed a deeply gendered regenerationist discourse, which proposed that regeneration would only be possible if the nation recovered its virile attributes.
Zira Box
wiley   +1 more source

Perception of facial emotional expressions by representatives of Asian and European cultural groups

open access: yesЭкспериментальная психология, 2017
The article presents the results of a cross-cultural study of the perception of basic emotional expressions by representatives of Asian and European cultural groups and compares them with the results obtained earlier on Russian sample ...
E.G. Khoze   +3 more
doaj   +1 more source

Taking a stand: using psychoanalysis to explore the positioning of subjects in discourse [PDF]

open access: yes, 2003
This paper is concerned with thinking through the cultural construction of personal identities whilst avoiding the classical social–individual division.
Frosh, Stephen, Pattman, R., Phoenix, A.
core   +1 more source

Sexing the history of Indian anti‐colonial internationalism: White women, Indian men and the politics of the personal

open access: yesGender &History, EarlyView.
Abstract In contrast to the wealth of literature on the gendered and sexual politics of Indian nationalism, studies on the internationalisation of Indian anti‐colonial nationalism are rarely informed by the twin themes of gender and sexuality. As Indian activists traversed international political spaces in the early twentieth century, they frequently ...
Joanna Simonow
wiley   +1 more source

Creativity and destructiveness in art and psychoanalysis [PDF]

open access: yes, 2015
This paper focuses on the creativity of the patient in analysis and compares it to that of the artist. Taking artists’ descriptions of their practices as its starting point, the paper suggests that the relationship between patient and analyst parallels ...
Abella   +24 more
core   +1 more source

Aspects of Radical Gay Liberation Theory in West Germany's Tuntenstreit, 1973–1975

open access: yesGender &History, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT This article examines in depth the theoretical positions of the Tuntenstreit – a major theoretical dispute within the radical West German gay liberation movement in the 1970s. By working through archival material as well as the dispute's fundamental texts, it renders visible its often‐neglected underlying theoretical motifs and, consequently ...
Hauke Branding
wiley   +1 more source

Causation in Psychoanalysis [PDF]

open access: yesFrontiers in Psychology, 2013
It has been argued that psychoanalytic and biological theories cannot be integrated because they rely on different epistemological grounds, namely on hermeneutic versus causal explanations, that are inconsistent with each other. Such inconsistency would seriously question the general possibility of neuropsychoanalytic research.
openaire   +4 more sources

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