WULOLIFE
The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense by Anna Freud Publisher: East China Normal University Press
The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense by Anna Freud Publisher: East China Normal University Press
Description
Introduction
The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense is an important work in the field of psychoanalysis. It has been popular for 80 years since its publication. The book is roughly divided into three parts, each of which has groundbreaking contributions. In the first part, Anna Freud pioneered the establishment of the self as the task of psychoanalysis, and explained that the unconscious derivatives that appear in consciousness and behavior are also the objects of psychoanalysis. In the second part, Anna Freud systematized the psychoanalytic knowledge of defense mechanisms, sorted out the defense mechanisms discussed in her father's works, further proposed new defense mechanisms, and explained their working principles in a broader model of personality development and psychopathology. In the third part, Anna Freud examined adolescence, a stage of psychological development that was neglected by early psychoanalysis.
About the Author
Anna Freud (December 3, 1895 - October 9, 1982) was an Austrian psychoanalyst. She was born in Vienna, the youngest of Sigmund Freud's six children, and the only one to inherit her father's legacy. Compared with her father, her work emphasized the importance of "self" and normal "developmental path", and also emphasized the importance of collaborative work in analysis and observation. Because of her contribution to psychoanalysis, she and Klein are considered the founders of psychoanalytic child psychology. In 1938, Anna Freud came to London, England with her father due to World War II, persisted in the practice and research of psychoanalysis, and served and worked for the British Psychoanalytic Association. In 1952, she founded the Hampstead Child Therapy Clinic, now the Anna Freud National Center for Children and Families. In 1973, she was elected president of the International Association of Psychoanalysts. On October 9, 1982, Anna Freud died in London.