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Autor Augusta Bonnard |
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Some discrepancies between perception and affect as illustrated by children in wartime / Augusta Bonnard en The psychoanalytic study of the child, Año 1954 - Vol. 9 ([16/07/2020])
[artículo]
Título : Some discrepancies between perception and affect as illustrated by children in wartime Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Augusta Bonnard, Autor Fecha de publicación: 2020 Artículo en la página: pp. 242-251 Idioma : Inglés (eng) Idioma original : Inglés (eng) Palabras clave: Percepción, Afecto, Trastornos de combate, Psicoanálisis. Resumen: Surprising though it may seem, very little has been written by those who experienced the air raids of the last war, as children. Perhaps it is still too real a subject for their elders, to seem worthy of publication, or of being read for pleasure. Ten years would, however, seem to be the required passage of time for literary romanticization of a common experience, or for a new idea to be accepted as familiar. My guess is that this is also likely to be the requisite period for certain neurotic symptoms to be attributed to wartime happenings. Link: ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=23426
in The psychoanalytic study of the child > Año 1954 - Vol. 9 [16/07/2020] . - pp. 242-251[artículo] Some discrepancies between perception and affect as illustrated by children in wartime [texto impreso] / Augusta Bonnard, Autor . - 2020 . - pp. 242-251.
Idioma : Inglés (eng) Idioma original : Inglés (eng)
in The psychoanalytic study of the child > Año 1954 - Vol. 9 [16/07/2020] . - pp. 242-251
Palabras clave: Percepción, Afecto, Trastornos de combate, Psicoanálisis. Resumen: Surprising though it may seem, very little has been written by those who experienced the air raids of the last war, as children. Perhaps it is still too real a subject for their elders, to seem worthy of publication, or of being read for pleasure. Ten years would, however, seem to be the required passage of time for literary romanticization of a common experience, or for a new idea to be accepted as familiar. My guess is that this is also likely to be the requisite period for certain neurotic symptoms to be attributed to wartime happenings. Link: ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=23426