Dissociation vs Repression: A New Neuropsychoanalytic Model for Psychopathology
- PMID: 33637834
- DOI: 10.1057/s11231-021-09279-x
Dissociation vs Repression: A New Neuropsychoanalytic Model for Psychopathology
Abstract
Recent research on trauma, attachment and neuroscience point at a clear divide in psychopathology between disorders based on repression, (as in Freud's repression model) and psychopathologies structured on dissociative mechanisms, a response to severe interpersonal trauma. Pathologies based on repression are typical of a neurotic structure, (with better developmental outcome), while pathologies based on dissociation are of more severe, often borderline nature, as in Otto Kernberg's borderline organization (1975). Neurobiology of attachment and affect regulation theory (Allan Schore), developmental psychopathology (Giovanni Liotti) and contemporary relational psychoanalysis (Philip Bromberg), all provide clinical evidence that the most severe psychopathology is of dissociative structure. This paper clarifies the after-effects of first level of traumatization of human agency (i.e., lack of attunement) and of the second level as in cases with actual abuse, maltreatment or incest (Mucci, 2013), with the internalization of a dyad victim/persecutor within the self of the survivor, as seen in borderline psychopathology (Mucci, 2018).
Keywords: borderline organization; dissociation; neuropsychoanalytic model; psychopathology; repression; trauma theory; victim/persecutor internalized dyad.
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