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  1. Repetition compulsion is the unconscious tendency of a person to repeat a traumatic event or its circumstances. This may take the form of symbolically or literally re-enacting the event, or putting oneself in situations where the event is likely to occur again.

  2. 19 wrz 2023 · Sigmund Freud called this repetition compulsion which he defined as ‘the desire to return to an earlier state of things.’ Freud held the view that a person’s inability to discuss or remember past traumatic events might lead them to repeat these traumas compulsively.

  3. classicus of Freud's account of repetition-compulsion, Beyond the Pleasure Principle, a book Laplanche describes as "the most fascinating and baffling text of the entire Freudian corpus" (1967:106). For reasons that will become apparent, what I have to say about the semiotic implications of Freud's discussion of

  4. 19 maj 2023 · Repetition compulsion was first described the Sigmund Freud, the Austrian physician best known for the development of psychoanalysis. Based on his observations, Freud suggested that people possess a death instinct, which is the unconscious force behind this drive to repeatedly seek out self-harm.

  5. Freud could not be more concerned than Hoffmann is with the double, the persecutory inner voice, the death-dealing repetition-compulsion. Paradoxically, Freud seems to scotomize almost entirely the presence in Hoffmann’s tale of those very themes he is most concerned with in the bulk of his essay.

  6. 23 gru 2020 · From it's clinical introduction in 1914 in Remembering, Repeating and Working Through to it's metapsychological elaboration in 1920 in Beyond the Pleasure Principle, it has occupied a central position in Freud's thinking.

  7. This paper will trace the evolution of the concept in Freud and in certain post-Freudian authors, especially Edward Bibring, Winnicott and Scarfone. Keywords: Repetition; binding; death instinct; memory; trauma.

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