Mourning and Melancholia
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Book •
Sigmund Freud's "Mourning and Melancholia" explores the psychological processes of grief and depression.
Freud differentiates between normal mourning, a process of detaching from a lost object, and melancholia, a more pathological state characterized by self-reproach and a loss of interest in the world.
The essay examines the role of the libido, the psychic energy driving desires and attachments, in both processes.
Freud analyzes how the ego deals with loss and the potential for fixation and regression in melancholia.
The essay remains influential in psychoanalytic theory and clinical practice, offering insights into the complexities of grief and its impact on the self.
Freud differentiates between normal mourning, a process of detaching from a lost object, and melancholia, a more pathological state characterized by self-reproach and a loss of interest in the world.
The essay examines the role of the libido, the psychic energy driving desires and attachments, in both processes.
Freud analyzes how the ego deals with loss and the potential for fixation and regression in melancholia.
The essay remains influential in psychoanalytic theory and clinical practice, offering insights into the complexities of grief and its impact on the self.