• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 446
  • 172
  • 53
  • 49
  • 40
  • 20
  • 18
  • 13
  • 13
  • 13
  • 13
  • 13
  • 13
  • 11
  • 10
  • Tagged with
  • 890
  • 599
  • 343
  • 341
  • 283
  • 258
  • 171
  • 124
  • 100
  • 88
  • 80
  • 80
  • 78
  • 77
  • 71
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
101

Freuds drömteori ur ett neurovetenskapligt perspektiv

Ehn, Jennica January 2009 (has links)
Denna litteraturöversikt jämför Sigmund Freuds drömteori med befintliga neurovetenskapliga forskningsfynd om drömmar för att finna likheter eller avvikelser dem emellan. Neuropsykoanalys är en tvärvetenskap som avser studera psykologiska fenomen med hjälp av neurovetenskaplig forskning och psykoanalytiska teorier. De båda fälten används för att belysa och stärka varandras fynd och postulat. Freuds teori som innebär att drömmar är önskeuppfyllelser och fyller funktionen av att vakta sömnen sammanfattas. Vidare sammanfattas neurovetenskapligt inriktad forskning som visar att drömmars karaktär styrs av hjärnstrukturers olika aktivitetsnivå och påverkan från signalsubstanser. Jämförelsen visar att neurovetenskapliga fynd talar för Freuds drömteori. Bland annat visas att system för behovsidentifiering och belöning är aktiva under sömn och att organismen skyddar sömn. Nervretningar aktiverar drömbildandet, kontrollfunktioner är hämmade under sömn och negativa emotioner präglar drömmar. Detta till trots kan teorin varken bekräftas eller dementeras med tillgänglig forskning.
102

Masculinity, Desire, and Disarmament in Four of Shakespeare's Comedies

Basye, Jennifer L 17 May 2013 (has links)
This dissertation sets out to explore Lacan’s idea of the paradoxical condition of the masculine gender construction. As privileged, favored, powerful, entitled, and hegemonic as it may seem, masculinity does not come without its awareness of what Lacan has most accurately labeled the “threat or even […] the guise of deprivation.” In fact, this construction not only assumes threat and deprivation to its identity but goes so far as to rely upon these potential attacks as necessities in order to perform itself. In other words, the masculine role can only be identified, recognized and/or mean when presented with a threat. As with any identity, masculinity is not autonomous nor is it essential in signification; it must confront that which is not masculine, that which is always a potential threat to its identity, if it is to appear in any way privileged, favored, powerful, entitled, hegemonic or whatever any culture construes masculinity to be. This argument is applied to four of Shakespeare’s comedies in terms of the male characters’ ability or reason to speak.
103

Kusliga grafiska element : Sigmund Freuds "Det kusliga" som utgångspunkt i skapande av dataspelsmiljö / Uncanny graphical elements : Sigmund Freud's "The Uncanny" as starting point in creation of computer game environment

Granström, Helena January 2011 (has links)
Huruvida kusliga fenomen, som psykoanalytikern Sigmund Freud beskrivit, kan användas för att förmedla kuslighet i realistiskt renderade 3D-modellerade miljöer, skapade till ett fiktivt dataspel, är vad som undersökts i detta arbete. Freuds teorier har redogjorts för och även kortfattat jämförts med relaterade ämnen. Två bildserier, den ena tänkt att vara hemtrevlig och den andra innehållande utvalda kusliga fenomen tänkta att förmedla kuslighet, renderades av ett 3D-modellerat vardagsrum. Dessa bilder användes sedan i en kvantitativ enkätundersökning som besvarades av 100 personer. Resultatet av undersökningen visade att de utvalda fenomenen lyckats förmedla kuslighet till respondenterna. Vissa fenomen bidrog dock mer än andra till den kusliga känslan. Smärre brister i undersökningen upptäcktes och diskuterades med en möjlig fortsättning av arbetet i åtanke. Slutligen ponerades möjligheterna att skapa ett faktiskt dataspel utifrån detta arbete.
104

The Abyss of the Past : A Freudian Reading of Mo Hayder's The Devil of Nanking

Rettkowski, Elisabeth January 2012 (has links)
The aim of this bachelor's thesis is to submit the character of Grey in Mo Hayder's novel, The Devil of Nanking to a Freudian reading with focus on repression and trauma and their impact on sexual development and obsessive behavior. The analysis of to what extent Grey's past and present experiences form the cornerstone to her mental and sexual development including repression and obsession will be based on Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic theories. The claim is that Grey's obsessiveness and sexuality can be explained and seen in terms of a Freudian view of trauma resulting in repression.
105

Freud écrit fictions dans l'œuvre et à l'œuvre /

Pinto, Ana Paula de Ávila Rey, Jean-Michel January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Reproduction de : Thèse de doctorat : Littérature comparée : Paris 8 : 2008. / Titre provenant de l'écran-titre. Bibliogr. p. 228-322.
106

Das Gesetz des Unbewussten im Rechtsdiskurs: Grundlinien einer psychoanalytischen Rechtstheorie nach Freud und Lacan

Schulte, Martin January 2008 (has links)
Zugl.: Frankfurt (Main), Univ., Diss., 2008
107

Das Unbewusste in der Menschenlehre Eduard

Kuebart, Gerhard, January 1970 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--München. / Includes bibliographical references.
108

Richard Neutra, biorealist

Morse, Bethany Christian 03 October 2013 (has links)
Over the course of his long career, architect Richard Neutra developed his notion of biorealism, a theory distinct from the modernist movement. Biorealism was no mere aesthetic approach; it applied the biological and psychological sciences to foster solutions for the built environment. Influences from Neutra’s formative years led him to believe that biorealistic design was the only way the human race would survive. He spent his life and career devoted to this single cause. This thesis explores Neutra’s definition of biorealism, using his many published works as evidence. It delves into Neutra’s formative years, looking at the influence of his brother, Wilhelm Neutra, the internist Schrötter von Kristelli, Sigmund Freud, Wilhelm Wundt, and Hippocrates. Turning then to Neutra’s built works, it looks at the effects of biorealism on three of his commissions: the Lovell Health House, the VDL Research House, and the Kaufmann Desert House. Each house demonstrates biorealistic design in its own way. Finally, this work scrutinizes why the literature on Neutra has been virtually void of a discussion of biorealism, and why scholars have largely overlooked this important aspect of his work. A following chapter analyzes the current and past literature on Neutra as they relate to biorealism. / text
109

Fragment of an analysis of the mother in Freud.

Stewart, Karyn Leona January 2013 (has links)
It was for the longest time that the mother in Freud troubled me. Unlike some feminist psychoanalysts such as Julia Kristeva who argue that the mother/maternity in Freud is finally to be thought of as a ‘massive nothing’ (Kristeva, 1987: 255), I knew that the mother was there/da, but it was how she was there that concerned me and forms the basis of this thesis. Freud shows us the mother in his work when he argues that the child’s first love object in its truest sense is the mother, ‘and all of his sexual instincts with their demand for satisfaction have been united upon this object’ (SE 18: 111). I highlight the ‘his’ because Freud’s focus on this first love object is primarily male. And although Freud does not differentiate between the little girl and little boy at this early stage, thereafter the girls relationship to the mother, argues Freud, ends in ‘hate’. She cannot be forgiven for not giving the little girl a penis. But the mother as a primordial ‘object’ not only becomes lost (and thereafter we are all involved in a search to ‘refind ‘it’/‘her’) but she seems also to be, uniformly Mater/matter to be overlooked. To use a rather explosive analogy, it is as if the mother and Freud are together yet separated in a double-barreled shotgun, with the misfiring of one barrel obscuring (obliterating) the other. Freud in fact used a similar analogy in an explanation for anxiety. Here the rifle is pointed at the ‘wild beast’ a description that Freud uses to describe the unruly forces of the libido in the unconscious. A fitting parallel then because the mother has a relation to anxiety and the unconscious that might best be described as central. Thus Freud writes and the mother is ‘shaded’. Again an apt analogy one that Freud himself uses to describe the Odyssean like shades that invade the unconscious as ghosts and taste blood. If the mother is indeed the dark-continent, a simile for the unconscious, or at least her sexuality, which after all is what is important in Freud’s Oedipal theory, then the question might be asked, ‘is the mother a ghost that haunts our living lives’? Of course a living mother is not a ghost, but then a literal explanation neglects the repression that accompanies the developing ego, an ego no less that is subject to childhood amnesia during the middle years of childhood. The Prologue introduces us to Freud the man. It seemed to me at the onset of this thesis that the mother is both universalised but also personalised. If Freud did not mourn his mother, why might this be so? And how is Freud himself mourned, remembered, outside his work? Chapter One is an introduction to Freud’s work, asking where the mother might be, and even why she may or may not be recognised in areas that seem peculiar to a space that mothers might occupy. Chapter Two looks at feminist psychoanalysts and asks how they engage with both Freud the man, and Freudian psychoanalysis and thereafter the later schools of psychoanalysis. Chapter Three engages with Freud and Freudian theory, offering an in-depth engagement with particular psychoanalytic concepts and places where the mother might be, or should be, but for some reason is not. Chapter Four explores the concept of anxiety, itself singled out as somehow having an integral relationship to the mother but again, Freud by a less than careful sleight of hand writes the mother out. And yet this is not a direct writing out, because Freud circulates around the point, the navel as it were, offering a kind of adverse reckoning, the mother is there but also, she is not. Chapter Five concludes this thesis by looking at several different theories, including Christopher Bollas’s ‘clowning mother’, and asks how might they offer alternative ways of understanding the mother, both within Freud and as an extension of Freud.
110

Disgust : the unrepresentable from Kant to Kristeva

Turner, Christopher John Bridgman January 2001 (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.0939 seconds