Anxiety and Affect in Psychoanalysis
Abstract
I examine the concept of affect or emotion in psychoanalysis in the context of Freud’s theory of anxiety especially that of the mechanism he proposed for inhibiting the psychological and physiological responses when anxiety-provoking situations threatened to recur. Freud pictures the original and subsequent experiences of anxiety as catastrophic and their recurrences as equally damaging. I argue that his picture and the deficiencies in the control mechanism he proposed have resulted in a lack of attention being given intense emotions in the psychoanalytic literature and a complete failure to consider those of less intensity.
Copyright (c) 2016 HORIZONS OF EDUCATION
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Authors who publish in this journal agree to the following terms:
- Authors retain the copyright to their work while granting the journal the right of first publication. The work will be simultaneously licensed under a CC BY-ND license, which permits others to share the work with proper credit given to the author and the original publication in this journal.
- Authors may enter into additional, non-exclusive agreements for the distribution of the published version of the work (e.g., posting it in an institutional repository or publishing it in another journal), provided that the original publication in this journal is acknowledged.
We allow and encourage authors to share their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on personal websites) both before and during the submission process, as this can foster beneficial exchanges and lead to earlier and increased citations of the published work. (See The Effect of Open Access). We recommend using any of the following academic networking platforms: