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Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association
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The Ecological Dimension of Psychoanalysis and the Concept of Inner Sustainability

Wolfgang Ley

Werderstrasse 23 69120 Heidelberg GERMANY, leyheidelberg{at}aol.com

An "ecological-cum-psychoanalytic" perspective elucidates the innate kinship between modern, critical ecological thinking and the assumptions on the nature of the human animal underlying Freudian psychoanalysis. "Critical ecology" engages with the issues posed by a meaningful, "sustainable" design for the relationship between nature and culture; psychoanalysis investigates and engages therapeutically with human self-relations in the field of tension existing between the culture-imprinted and culture-productive "ego," on the one hand, and the independent, naturally established motivational sides of the psyche subsumed by Freud under the term "id" on the other. Against an ecological-cum-psychoanalytic backdrop, modern developments in object relations theory and self psychology can be understood in a way that places them in a conceptual framework corresponding to Freud's central concern with the balance or integration—successful or unsuccessful—of the motivational (interactional) strivings of "internal nature" and the requirements posed by human "self-production" via culture. Psychoanalysis and critical ecology, it is argued, stand to profit from one another.

Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, Vol. 56, No. 4, 1279-1307 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0003065108327179


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