Is learning disability determined from birth? Psychoanalysis has always striven to reconstruct damaged human subjectivity. However, with a few exceptions, people with learning disabilities have long been excluded from this enterprise as a matter of course. It has been taken for granted that learning disability is a deficient state in which psychodynamics play but a minor role and where development is irrevocably determined by organic conditions. First published in German in 1980s and published here in English for the first time, this brave and provocative book was one of the first to attempt to understand learning disabilities in terms of psychoanalysis and socio-psychology. Controversially, the author does not distinguish between a primary organic handicap and a secondary psychological one; rather, she argues that it is developed from the very outset of the process of socialisation during the interaction of caregiver and infant, and therefore gives the analyst room to work on this maladapted socialisation. She illustrates the effectiveness of this theory when put into practice in a number of illuminating case studies. Still as influential and powerful as when it was first published, Nameless will be of interest to psychoanalysts and clinicians from across the mental health services who work with people with learning disabilities.
Author(s): Dietm Niedecken
Edition: 1
Year: 2003
Language: English
Pages: 272
Book Cover......Page 1
Title......Page 4
Contents......Page 5
Author's preface to the English edition......Page 8
Foreword by Valerie Sinason......Page 16
Translator's acknowledgements......Page 19
Introduction by Mario Erdheim: Learning disability, murder and phantasm......Page 20
'Learning Disability' as an institution and the forgotten human dimension......Page 24
The interface between institution and fate. Diagnosis as a Trojan horse: guilt-exonerating but equally a handicapping label......Page 41
The process of developing learning disabilities......Page 63
The enactment of soul murder......Page 101
From anxiety to technological treatment strategies......Page 142
Attempts at breaking out......Page 168
A child without behavioural difficulties......Page 193
Possessed by the devil......Page 208
The infantocidal introject......Page 243
Epilogue: Solidarity......Page 254
Notes and references......Page 260
Bibliography......Page 266
Index......Page 270