Projecting Paranoia


Projecting Paranoia pdf

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Projecting Paranoia


Projecting Paranoia

Author: Ray Pratt

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 2001


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A wide-ranging and idiosyncratic look at sixty years of politics and film that uncovers how American movies have mirrored and even challenged anxieties and paranoid perceptions embedded in American society since the start of the Cold War. The first book to take a sweeping look at 60 years of film and analyze them thematically.

The Paranoid Process


The Paranoid Process

Author: William W. Meissner

language: en

Publisher: Jason Aronson

Release Date: 1978


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TABLE OF CONTENTS: Part 1: The Structure and Function of Paranoid Ideation. 1 The Development of Theoretical Perspectives. 2 Paranoid States. 3 Pathological States Related to Paranoia. 4 Paranoid Mechanisms. 5 The Genesis of Paranoid Style. Part 2: Clinical Perspective on the Paranoid Process. Part 3: Toward a Clinical Theory of the Paranoid Process. 16 Paranoia as Process. 17 Paranoid Mechanisms: Introjection. 18 Paranoid Mechanisms: Projection. 19 Paranoid Mechanisms: Phobic States and Nightmares. 20 Paranoid Constructions. 21 Defensive Aspects: Narcissism. 22 Defensive Aspects: Aggression. 23 Genetic Aspects. 24 Narcissistic Development. 25 The Paranoid Process in Early Development. 26 The Paranoid Process in Adolescent Development. 27 Family Processes in the Genesis of Paranoid Ideation. 28 The Paranoid Process in Adaptation.

Portrait of the Artist as a Young Patient


Portrait of the Artist as a Young Patient

Author: Gerald Alper

language: en

Publisher: International Scholars Publications

Release Date: 1997-07


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Portrait of the Artist as a Young Patient, the first book of non-fiction written by Gerald Alper, is also the first serious attempt to explore in depth the dynamics of the yet-to-be recognized, unfulfilled and usually perplexed fledgling artist. The artist tries to live in two separate worlds: a factual, linear, banal, reality-driven outer world that is best kept at arm's length; and a creatively organized, aesthetically orchestrated, dramatically engaging inner world that is forever being obsessively cultivated. Indeed, facilitating the patient in his or her efforts to forge a usable bridge between these generally discontinuous worlds is no small part of the task of the therapist who elects to work with such young artists.