Results 251 to 260 of about 94,985 (291)
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Phantom Limbs, Neglect Syndromes, Repressed Memories, and Freudian Psychology

1994
This chapter discusses two of the most fascinating syndromes in clinical medicine—phantom limbs and somatoparaphrenic delusions—and aims to bring them into the respectable arena of modern neuroscience. The syndromes illustrate certain important principles concerning the functional organization of the normal human brain.
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Critical Psychology in Relation to Political Repression and Violence

International Journal of Mental Health, 1988
For psychologists and mental health workers to devote themselves to the topic of political repression and violence is a relatively new departure. There can be fewdictators and death squads exceptedwho will not welcome this sign of their concern and commitment.
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The return of the repressed: Psychology's problematic relations with psychoanalysis, 1909-1960.

American Psychologist, 1992
When psychoanalysis first arrived in the United States, most psychologists ignored it. By the 1920s, however, psychoanalysis had so captured the public imagination that it threatened to eclipse experimental psychology entirely. This article analyzes the complex nature of this threat and the myriad ways that psychologists responded to it.
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Interacting with trauma: Clinicians' responses to treating psychological aftereffects of political repression.

American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1991
Therapists treating individuals who have been traumatized by violent political repression may undergo intense emotional responses, ranging from denial to overidentification. In discussing these reactions, establishment of a therapeutic alliance and awareness of the sociopolitical context of the trauma are highlighted as central elements in the ...
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Visible wounds of invisible repression: A perspective on the importance of investigating the biological and psychological impact of political repression.

Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy
Exposure to psychological trauma is a well-accepted risk factor for the development of mental and somatic diseases. However, chronic stressors not fulfilling the criteria of traumatic experience can have similarly adverse health consequences. While the harmful impact of chronic stressors is generally recognized among researchers, there is a lack of ...
Ruth Marheinecke   +2 more
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Social Psychological Dynamics of Repression and Resistance to Repression: Insights From the October 2019 Lebanese Uprising

Abstract Inspired by our lived experience of the October 17 Lebanese uprising in 2019, we propose a framework to advance our understanding of the social psychological dynamics of repression and counter-repression. The framework draws on the growing social psychological literature on antecedents of collective action (e.g., injustice ...
Rim Saab   +3 more
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The Origins and Psychology of Human Cooperation

Annual Review of Psychology, 2021
Joseph Henrich, Michael Muthukrishna
exaly  

Introduction: The Psychology of Resistance in Violent and Repressive Contexts

Abstract In this chapter, we introduce the reader to the concepts discussed in the volume and provide a summary of the volume’s contributions. First, we offer definitions of resistance, violence, and repression to frame the scope of the volume. We discuss the book’s thematic structure and our rationale for this organization. We highlight
Johanna Ray Vollhardt   +1 more
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Psychology as a Historical Science

Annual Review of Psychology, 2021
Michael Muthukrishna   +2 more
exaly  

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