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Chapter 5 The Psychoanalytic Approach: The Neo-Freudians

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Title: Chapter 5 The Psychoanalytic Approach: The Neo-Freudians


1
Chapter 5The Psychoanalytic ApproachThe
Neo-Freudians
2
Alfred Adler (1870-1937)
  • Born in Vienna in 1870, the third of six children
  • Had a series of childhood illnesses, including
    pneumonia and rickets, and was nearly run over
    twice by carts in the streets
  • Was first pampered by his mother, then
    dethroned when his younger brother was born
  • Strove to overcome his sense of inferiority by
    studying furiously
  • Earned his medical degree in 1895
  • Became interested in Freuds ideas, defended
    Freud, and was invited to join Freuds inner
    circle
  • Split with Freud in 1911 and form his own Society
    for Free Psychoanalytic Research, later named the
    Association of Individual Psychology

3
Key concepts introduced by Adler
  • Striving for superiority
  • Inferiority complex
  • The social interest
  • Parental influences on personality development
  • The optimal parenting style
  • Problematic parenting styles
  • Pampering
  • Neglect
  • Birth order influences on personality
  • First borns problem children, neurotics,
    criminals, drunkards, and perverts?
  • Middle borns de-throned and therefore
    motivated to strive for superiority?
  • Last borns pampered throughout their childhoods
    to the point of being spoiled?

4
Birth order differences What the research
findings actually show
  • Firstborns work hard to meet adult standards from
    an early age. They tend to achieve more in life
    and assume positions of greater responsibility,
    but they also tend to be more anxious and
    stressed.
  • Middle borns dont stand out as a group. They
    tend to be more like firstborns, however, when
    the age gap between them and their older
    sibling(s) is large, rather than small.
  • Lastborns tend to be charming, sociable, and
    relatively popular with their peers. They can
    also be somewhat rebellious and unsatisfied with
    the existing social order.
  • Only children tend to resemble firstborns in many
    respects. They often feel particularly burdened
    by the responsibility of fulfilling their
    parents hopes and dreams for them.

5
Design of the study by Ickes and Turner (1983)
? with older sister(s) ? with younger sister(s)
? with older brothers ? with OS - ? with OB ? with YS - ? with OB
? with younger brothers ? with OS - ? with YB ? with YS - ? with YB
6
Birth order influences in mixed-sex dyads (Ickes
Turner, 1983)
7
Birth order influences in mixed-sex dyads (Ickes
Turner, 1983)
8
Birth order influences in mixed-sex dyads (Ickes
Turner, 1983)
9
Birth order influences in mixed-sex dyads (Ickes
Turner, 1983)
10
Birth order influences in mixed-sex dyads (Ickes
Turner, 1983)
11
Carl Jung (1875-1961)
  • Was born in a small Swiss canton
  • As a child, he was a loner who was extremely
    introspective
  • Earned his medical degree in 1900
  • Began a correspondence with Freud, whom he met in
    1907
  • Became Freuds disciple and heir apparent, and
    accompanied Freud on his 1909 trip to the US
  • Broke with Freud in 1914 and spent the next seven
    years in virtual isolation
  • Emerged from this period with a new view of
    personality that built on many of Freuds ideas
    but added many new and unique elements

12
Key concepts introduced by Jung
  • Identification of introversionextraversion as a
    fundamental dimension of human personality
  • The collective unconscious
  • complemented the personal unconscious
  • represents the collective experience of the human
    species
  • Archetypes primordial images found in all
    cultures at all times
  • Primary archetypes
  • The self
  • The shadow the dark side of the self
  • The anima the feminine aspect of the male
  • The animus the masculine aspect of the female

13
Jungian archetypes
Primary Archetypes Primary Characters Primary Characters Women Figures Primary Situations Symbols and Associations
The Self The Hero The Woman Figure The Great Mother The Quest Light-Darkness
The Shadow The Scapegoat The Child The Temptress The Task Water-Desert
The Anima The Outcast The Eternal Boy The Platonic Ideal The Initiation Heaven-Hell
The Animus The Devil Figure The Superman The Unfaithful Wife The Journey
The Wise Old Man The Divine Couple The Fall
The Trickster God (or The Gods) Death and Rebirth
14
Jungian archetypes in the movie Star Wars
Jungian archetype Character
The Hero Luke Skywalker
The Father Ben Kenobi
The Anima Princess Leia
The Wise Old Man Yoda
The Shadow Darth Vader
The Trickster Han Solo
15
Erik Homberger Erikson (1902-1994)
  • His Danish father abandoned the family before he
    was born.
  • His mother married Dr. Theodor Homberger, whom he
    believed to be his real father.
  • He had identity problems that led him to resist
    becoming a physician and wander about Europe
    instead.
  • He met Anna Freud and her colleagues, acquired a
    Montessori teaching credential, and learned about
    the psychoanalytic approach.
  • He fled the Nazis in 1933 and moved to the US,
    where he published on ego psychology and proposed
    a psycho-social stage theory of personality
    development.

16
Key concepts introduced by Erikson
  • Ego psychology emphasized the important
    functions of the ego
  • Acts as the mediator between the id, the
    superego, and the demands of external reality
  • Works to establish and maintain a sense of
    identity
  • Stable sense of identity (successful outcome)
  • Identity crisis (unsuccessful outcome)
  • Works to establish and maintain mastery over the
    environment
  • A psychosocial stage model of personality
    development
  • Viewed the conflicts at each stage as primarily
    psychosocial conflicts, rather than psychosexual
    conflicts
  • Added stages that extended throughout the entire
    lifespan, from infancy through old age

17
Ericksons psychosocial stage theory
18
Karen Horney (1885-1952)
  • Born in Hamburg, Germany in 1885
  • Resented her authoritarian fathers sexist
    attitudes
  • Determined to always be first in her class, to go
    to college, and then to medical school
  • Earned her medical degree in 1915
  • Studied to become a psychoanalyst and found much
    to criticize in Freuds writings
  • Joined the New York Psychoanalytic Institute in
    1934 but split with them in 1941 over differences
    of opinion
  • Established the American Institute for
    Psychoanalysis

19
Key concepts introduced by Horney
  • Neurotic adaptation styles
  • Moving toward others
  • Moving away from others
  • Moving with others
  • Moving against others
  • Neurotic shoulds neurotic demands placed on
    oneself
  • Feminine psychology
  • Countered Freuds concept of penis envy with her
    own concept of womb envy
  • Pointed out the more sexist aspects of Freuds
    theorizing and called for a greater emphasis on
    social and cultural factors

20
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22
Key concepts introduced by Horney
  • Neurotic adaptation styles
  • Moving toward others
  • Moving away from others
  • Moving with others
  • Moving against others
  • Neurotic shoulds neurotic demands placed on
    oneself
  • Feminine psychology
  • Countered Freuds concept of penis envy with her
    own concept of womb envy
  • Pointed out the more sexist aspects of Freuds
    theorizing and called for a greater emphasis on
    social and cultural factors

23
Two ways to better integrate the real self and
the ideal self in response to neurotic shoulds
real self
ideal self
real self
ideal self
24
Key concepts introduced by Horney
  • Neurotic adaptation styles
  • Moving toward others
  • Moving away from others
  • Moving with others
  • Moving against others
  • Neurotic shoulds neurotic demands placed on
    oneself
  • Feminine psychology
  • Countered Freuds concept of penis envy with her
    own concept of womb envy
  • Pointed out the more sexist aspects of Freuds
    theorizing and called for a greater emphasis on
    social and cultural factors

25
Erich Fromm (1900-1980)
  • Was deeply troubled by the destructiveness of the
    first Word War he witnessed as a Jew living in an
    anti-Semitic environment
  • Sought answers in the psychoanalytic writings of
    Freud and the economic theory of Marx
  • Received his PhD in 1922 and studied
    psychoanalysis in Berlin
  • Emigrated to the US when the Nazis gained power
    in Germany
  • Published his influential book Escape from
    Freedom in 1941
  • Taught at several universities in the US

26
Key concepts introduced by Fromm
  • The rise of modern democracies brought people
    freedom
  • But this freedom, and the responsibility it
    carried with it, was intimidating and
    overwhelming
  • People therefore looked for ways to escape from
    freedom and responsibility
  • through authoritarianism
  • through destructiveness
  • through automaton conformity
  • Positive freedom requires spontaneity and results
    in individuation

27
Views of religion held by psychoanalytic theorists
  • Sigmund Freud was an atheist who thought that
    religion was the opiate of the masses, and
    viewed it as a type of collective wish
    fulfillment.
  • The son of a minister, Carl Jung struggled with
    religious issues throughout his life but felt
    that the universality of the God archetype
    attested to its importance.
  • Erich Fromm drew a strong distinction between
    authoritarian religions and humanistic religions,
    and argued that the first type require people to
    deny their own identity whereas the second type
    provide opportunities for personal growth.

28
Jungs eight psychological types
Attitude
Function Extraversion Introversion
Thinking Focus on learning about the external world. Practical, objective thinker. Interested in facts. Interested in understanding own ideas. Reflective. Interested in philosophical issues and the meaning of ones own life.
Feeling Likely to be moody, capricious. Easily conforms to a group. Likes to follow fads and fashions. Can be highly emotional at times. Has deep emotional experiences, but keeps them to himself or herself. Often a nonconformist.
Sensing Interested in experiencing the external world. Often sensual, and can become obsessed with pleasure seeking. May live for the moment. More interested in own thoughts and inner sensations than in external objects. May express self through art or music in idiosyncratic ways.
Intuiting Constantly seeking new challenges and interests in the external world. Gets bored easily. Enjoys novel situations. Likes to explore new and different ideas but has difficulty developing insights or communicating them to other people.
29
Optimal career settings for personality types
Type Career Setting
Extraverts Work requiring group interactions, meeting with people
Introverts Quiet, solitary desk work with few interruptions
Thinking Work involving a lot of problem solving, especially requiring logic
Feeling Service jobs, especially those benefiting underprivileged groups
Sensing Work requiring attention to details, with immediate goals and relevance
Intuiting Non-repetitive tasks with new challenges, requiring insight
Judging Highly organized and structured work, requiring fact-based decisions
Perceiving Work requiring the ability to adapt to new circumstances
30
Strengths and criticisms of neo-Freudian theories
  • Strengths
  • Elaboration of important concepts that Freud
    ignored or de-emphasized
  • Introduction of many new and useful concepts
  • Set the stage for the humanistic approach
  • Made the psychoanalytic approach more widely
    acceptable
  • Criticisms
  • Sometimes lacking in research support
  • Patient samples make it difficult to generalize
    to all people
  • None dealt with so many topics in so much depth
    as Freud
  • As with Freud, the tone and emphases of the
    neo-Freudians theories reveal their personal
    biases

31
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