The Work of Psychic Figurability: Mental States Without Representation

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Psychology Press, 2005 - Literary Criticism - 212 pages

The majority of psychoanalysts today agree that the analytic setting faces them daily with certain aspects of their work for which the answers provided by an analytic theory centred exclusively on the notion of representation prove insufficient.

On the basis of their experience of analytic practice and illustrated by fascinating clinical material, César and Sára Botella set out to address what they call the work of figurability as a way of outlining the passage from the unrepresentable to the representational. They develop a conception of psychic functioning, which is essentially grounded in the inseparability of the negative, trauma, and the emergence of intelligibility, and describe the analyst's work of figurability arising from the formal regression of his thinking during the session, which proves to be the best and perhaps the only means of access to this state beyond the mnemic trace which is memory without recollection.

The Work of Psychic Figurability argues that taking this work into consideration at the heart of the theory of practice is indispensable. Without this, the analytic process is too often in danger of slipping into interminable analyses, into negative therapeutic reactions, or indeed, into disappointing successive analyses.

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Contents

ParisLondon back and forth
17
Nonrepresentation
29
The geometer and the psychoanalyst
39
Figurability and the work of figurability
45
On the autoerotic deficiency of the paranoiac
53
Working as a double
68
Only insidealso outside
86
A Community in the regression of thought
100
Mysticism knowledge and trauma
141
A psychoanalytic approach to perception
151
The lost object of hallucinatory satisfaction
167
Notes
181
Bibliography
187
Index
203
107
204
Copyright

The negative of the trauma
109

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