The Role of the Father in the Development of Psychosis
Uloga oca u razvitku psihoze
Апстракт
In psychoanalysis, fathering has not received much analytical attention and only little is known about the actual impact of paternity on the development of certain psychopathology. This paper seeks to carefully examine and critically discuss the impact of fathering on psychotic individuals. It elaborates on the importance of the father in the healthy development of the children, as well as on the consequences that his absence entails for their psyche. Drawing on a Lacanian analytical framework, it is argued that, nowadays, the paternal figure has significantly lost its previous status. The gradual extinction of the paternal function, within the contemporary cultural environment, is mainly because of important social and legal changes in the familial structure, such as the increase of single-parent families and the legalisation of the adoption of children by gay couples.
Кључне речи:
Jacques Lacan / mental disorders / psihoanalizaИзвор:
Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society, 2011, 183-206Институција/група
IFDTTY - JOUR AU - Avramaki, Elissavet AU - Tsekeris, Charalambos PY - 2011 UR - http://rifdt.instifdt.bg.ac.rs/123456789/568 AB - In psychoanalysis, fathering has not received much analytical attention and only little is known about the actual impact of paternity on the development of certain psychopathology. This paper seeks to carefully examine and critically discuss the impact of fathering on psychotic individuals. It elaborates on the importance of the father in the healthy development of the children, as well as on the consequences that his absence entails for their psyche. Drawing on a Lacanian analytical framework, it is argued that, nowadays, the paternal figure has significantly lost its previous status. The gradual extinction of the paternal function, within the contemporary cultural environment, is mainly because of important social and legal changes in the familial structure, such as the increase of single-parent families and the legalisation of the adoption of children by gay couples. T2 - Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society T1 - The Role of the Father in the Development of Psychosis T1 - Uloga oca u razvitku psihoze SP - 183 EP - 206 DO - 10.2298/FID1104183A ER -
@article{ editor = "Milidrag, Predrag", author = "Avramaki, Elissavet and Tsekeris, Charalambos", year = "2011", abstract = "In psychoanalysis, fathering has not received much analytical attention and only little is known about the actual impact of paternity on the development of certain psychopathology. This paper seeks to carefully examine and critically discuss the impact of fathering on psychotic individuals. It elaborates on the importance of the father in the healthy development of the children, as well as on the consequences that his absence entails for their psyche. Drawing on a Lacanian analytical framework, it is argued that, nowadays, the paternal figure has significantly lost its previous status. The gradual extinction of the paternal function, within the contemporary cultural environment, is mainly because of important social and legal changes in the familial structure, such as the increase of single-parent families and the legalisation of the adoption of children by gay couples.", journal = "Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society", title = "The Role of the Father in the Development of Psychosis, Uloga oca u razvitku psihoze", pages = "183-206", doi = "10.2298/FID1104183A" }
Milidrag, P., Avramaki, E.,& Tsekeris, C.. (2011). The Role of the Father in the Development of Psychosis. in Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society, 183-206. https://doi.org/10.2298/FID1104183A
Milidrag P, Avramaki E, Tsekeris C. The Role of the Father in the Development of Psychosis. in Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society. 2011;:183-206. doi:10.2298/FID1104183A .
Milidrag, Predrag, Avramaki, Elissavet, Tsekeris, Charalambos, "The Role of the Father in the Development of Psychosis" in Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society (2011):183-206, https://doi.org/10.2298/FID1104183A . .