734 research outputs found

    Night of the Unexpected: A Critique of the 'Uncanny ' and Its Apotheosis Within Cultural and Social Theory

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    This essay attempts a critical analysis of the boom in 'uncanny' theory. As the 'uncanny' has carved its image in cultural, political, sociological and aesthetic theory, there has been little attempt to challenge the notion that all critical work is or should be uncanny. Introductions to the concept, such as those by Nicholas Royle and more recently Anna Masschelein, have tended to promote its ubiquity and irreducibility, even while acknowledging a dramatic shift in its fortunes since the 1990s. Opening with a brief genealogy of uncanny theory in the late twentieth century (looking to work on Freud, the influence of Derrida and American deconstruction) the article pays particular attention to the watershed of the late 1980s when the uncanny is increasingly assimilated to the 'spectral' and begins to take shape as an autonomous theory. It probes the influence of Heidegger, who inflected Derrida's own turn to spectres, and the way the uncanny is mobilised on cultural and sociological terrain as a specifically ethical tool: a site of historical mourning or sociological resistance. The article proposes that the anti-conceptualism of the uncanny is a transcendant gesture which needs to be read in the context of a crisis in the theorisation of Marxism at the end of the 1980s. In all the clamour over the disturbing and in-coercible logic of the uncanny, there has been little analysis of its potentially reactionary function on the contemporary scene

    From Tones in Tinnitus to Sensed Social Interaction in Schizophrenia: How Understanding Cortical Organization Can Inform the Study of Hallucinations and Psychosis

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    The content, modality, and perceptual attributes of hallucinations and other psychotic symptoms may be related to neural representation at a single cell and population level in the cerebral cortex. A brief survey of some principles and examples of cortical representation and organization will be presented together with evidence for a correspondence between the neurobiology of brain areas activated at the time of a hallucination and the content of the corresponding hallucinatory and psychotic experiences. Contrasting the hallucinations of schizophrenia with other conditions, we highlight phenomenological aspects of hallucinations that are ignored in clinical practice but carry potentially important information about the brain regions and dysfunctions underlying them. Knowledge of cortical representation and organization are being used to develop animal models of hallucination and to test treatments that are now beginning to translate to the clinical domain

    Negative outcome Charles Bonnet Syndrome

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    BACKGROUND: Charles Bonnet Syndrome (CBS) is widely considered a transient condition without adverse consequence, questioning the need for treatment. Yet, while this view may be true of the majority of people with CBS, it is recognised that some have negative experiences and outcomes. Here, we attempt to better understand negative outcome CBS and the factors that influence it. METHODS: 4000 members of the Macular Society were sent a structured questionnaire covering the phenomenology of CBS, its prognosis and impact, symptom reporting, patient knowledge and sources of information. RESULTS: 492 people with CBS were identified. Kaplanā€“Meier analysis suggested 75% had CBS for 5ā€…years or more. Thirty-two per cent had negative outcome. Factors associated with negative outcome were: (1) frequent, fear-inducing, longer-lasting hallucination episodes, (2) one or more daily activities affected, (3) attribution of hallucinations to serious mental illness, (4) not knowing about CBS at the onset of symptoms. Duration of CBS or the type of content hallucinated were not associated with negative outcome. CONCLUSIONS: CBS is of longer duration than previously suspected with clinically relevant consequences in a third of those affected. Interventions that reduce the frequency, duration or fear of individual hallucination episodes and education prior to hallucination onset may help reduce negative outcome

    Throwing the case open: the impossible subject of Luisa Passeriniā€™s Autobiography of a Generation

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    For John Forrester, the ā€˜caseā€™, particularly in its psychoanalytic version, makes possible a science of the particular ā€“ knowledge open to the differences of individuals and situations. This article develops that aspect of Forresterā€™s account which linked the psychoanalytic case with forms of autobiography ā€“ new narrations of that particular self. After Freud, many authors ā€“ literary and psychoanalytic ā€“ have taken up the challenge of narrating subjectivity in new forms, engaging a quasi-psychoanalytic framework (H.D., Walter Benjamin, Frantz Fanon, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick are examples). Focusing on Luisa Passeriniā€™s text Autobiography of a Generation, which deals with the Italian experience of 1968, the article examines some of the features of such hybrid texts, and argues that psychoanalysis makes a contribution not just to the forms of self-investigation they pursue, but more significantly to the search for a radically new methodology of narration. Such models end up as ā€˜impossibleā€™ cases, but in so doing they explore new interdisciplinary means for understanding the historical shaping of subjectivity

    The Modernist Road to the Unconscious

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    This article examines the relation between psychoanalysis and modernism. It highlights the shift in the understanding of the encounters between modernism and psychoanalysis, which was based on the views of Sigmund Freud. The article discusses the focus of recent work on psychoanalysis and modernism in the works of Melanie Klein, who published throughout the 1920s and who, by the early to mid-1930s, had begun to develop a conceptual focus on mourning and anxiety in the earliest years of infancy. It suggests that while the psychoanalytic criticism of modernist literary texts in classical Freudian terms has long seemed to be in eclipse, new psychoanalytic readings of modernism and archaeologies of modernist contact with psychoanalysis are still in the process of unfolding

    Real Fantasies: Reinserting the Imaginary in the Scene of Social Encounter

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    This article considers the ā€˜imaginaryā€™ as an entity that is often excluded from the sociological imagination, and argues that the imagination of human encounters ā€“ including fantasies about this ā€“ are essential for understanding the dynamics of interaction processes. Despite the emergence, since the 1980s, of a literature aiming to constitute fantasy and the imaginary as an object of social study, the sociological portrait of human interaction has remained dominated by cognitive models, even where these draw on psychoanalysis. Psychoanalytic evocations of internal processes as a theatre, or dramaturgy, are placed alongside dramaturgical models of mental life from sociology, in order to pin-point the differences in their characterisation of the function of imagination, and especially its emotional investments. I argue for a view of imagination and fantasy as crucial social facts. Drawing in particular on psychoanalytically-informed examples from Frantz Fanon, David Marriott and others, I also argue that the reason why the imaginary keeps being rendered invisible to sociology is not because it cannot be empirically objectified. Rather it is because the antagonisms and disavowals which surround many interaction processes, along with the strong emotions this provokes, fail to fit with sociologyā€™s assumptions about rational intent

    Sinopsychoanalysis

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    Think sight loss, think Charles Bonnet syndrome

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    Neural patterns of conscious visual awareness in the Riddoch syndrome

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    The Riddoch syndrome is one in which patients blinded by lesions to their primary visual cortex can consciously perceive visual motion in their blind field, an ability that correlates with activity in motion area V5. Our assessment of the characteristics of this syndrome in patient ST, using multimodal MRI, showed that: 1. ST's V5 is intact, receives direct subcortical input, and decodable neural patterns emerge in it only during the conscious perception of visual motion; 2. moving stimuli activate medial visual areas but, unless associated with decodable V5 activity, they remain unperceived; 3. ST's high confidence ratings when discriminating motion at chance levels, is associated with inferior frontal gyrus activity. Finally, we report that ST's Riddoch Syndrome results in hallucinatory motion with hippocampal activity as a correlate. Our results shed new light on perceptual experiences associated with this syndrome and on the neural determinants of conscious visual experience

    A Novel Method for Reducing the Effect of Tonic Muscle Activity on the Gamma Band of the Scalp EEG

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    Neural oscillations in the gamma band are of increasing interest, but separating them from myogenic electrical activity has proved difficult. A novel algorithm has been developed to reduce the effect of tonic scalp and neck muscle activity on the gamma band of the EEG. This uses mathematical modelling to fit individual muscle spikes and then subtracts them from the data. The method was applied to the detection of motor associated gamma in two separate groups of eight subjects using different sampling rates. A reproducible increase in high gamma (65ā€“85Ā Hz) magnitude occurred immediately after the motor action in the left central area (pĀ =Ā 0.02 and pĀ =Ā 0.0002 for the two cohorts with individually optimized algorithm parameters, compared to pĀ =Ā 0.03 and pĀ =Ā 0.16 before correction). Whilst the magnitude of this event-related gamma synchronisation was not reduced by the application of the EMG reduction algorithm, the baseline left central gamma magnitude was significantly reduced by an average of 23Ā % with a faster sampling rate (pĀ <Ā 0.05). In comparison, at left and right temporo-parietal locations the gamma amplitude was reduced by 60 and 54Ā % respectively (pĀ <Ā 0.05). The reduction of EMG contamination by fitting and subtraction of individual spikes shows promise as a method of improving the signal to noise ratio of high frequency neural oscillations in scalp EEG
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