01603 2200241 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001800097041000800115082001000123084001600133100002000149245009000169260003400259300003500293500002000328504001600348520092900364650001801293990002501311990002501336INLIS00000000000604020221010091452 a0010-0520006040221010 | | eng  a0-521-65956-6 aeng a154.2 a154.2 BIL f0 aBillig, Michael1 aFreudian Repression : Conversation Creating The Unconscious / 01717 /cMichael Billig aCanbridge :bRoutledge,c1999 avii, 290 hlm. ; 23 cm ;c23 cm aIndeks : Indeks aBibliografi aIn Freundian Repression, Michael Billig present an original reformulation of Freud's concept of repression, showing that in his theory of the unconscious he fails to examine how people actually repress shameful thoughts. Drawing on recent insights from discursive psychology, Billig suggests that in learning to speak we also learn what not to say: language is thus both expressive and repressive. He applies this perspective to some of freud's classic case histories such as 'dora' and the 'Rat man' and the great psychologist's own life to show the improtance of small words in speech. By focusing on previously Freundian Repression also offers new insights on the current debate about recovered memories and the ideological background to psychoanalysis which will guarantee its interdisciplinary appeal to psychologists, language theorists, discourse analysts, student of psychoanalysis literary studies and sociologists. 4aI. Psychology a01717/MKRI-P/II-2005 a01717/MKRI-P/II-2005