The mobilizing function of interpretative speech
Pages 164 to 170
Cite this article
- DUFOUR, Jacques,
- Dufour, Jacques.
- Dufour, J.
https://doi.org/10.3917/cohe.242.0164
Cite this article
- Dufour, J.
- Dufour, Jacques.
- DUFOUR, Jacques,
https://doi.org/10.3917/cohe.242.0164
The author links the mobilizing function of interpretative speech to the birth of psychoanalysis in a primitive scene that Freud observed between resistance and transference. The science of the mind in its three dimensions of subjective experience, theoretical thought, and interpretative speech, has a fruitfulness during work in progress that finds no limits, because any limit of theoretical thought calls for new paths of thinking. Thus began a journey along bifurcating paths, from Freud to Bion, via Melanie Klein, where the limits of symbolizing speech would give rise to transformative speech, and then from Bion to Grinberg, via Ogden, where the limits of transformative speech would give rise to the transformative act.
- mobilizing speech
- resistance/transference
- repression/symbolization
- reverie/transformation
- projective counteridentification/speaking interaction