Psychoanalytic theory
Abstract
Psychoanalytic theory and practice originated in the late nineteenth century in the
work of Sigmund Freud (1956-1939). It offers a distinctive way of thinking about the
human mind and of responding to psychological distress. Psychoanalysis has
travelled widely from its central European origins, and has evolved into a complex,
multi-facetted and internally fractured body of knowledge situated at the interface
between the human and natural sciences, and between clinical practice and
academic theory. Notwithstanding critiques of its Eurocentric origins, psychoanalysis
has been taken up in many different cultural contexts, perhaps most notably in Latin
America but also in India, Japan and elsewhere. Its geography and spatiality have
become topics for geographical study albeit primarily within the Anglophone literature
(Cameron, 2006; Kingsbury, 2003).
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