Abstract

Foreword Mardi J. Horowitz Preface Jerome L. Singer Acknowledgments 1: Repression, Reconstruction, and Defense: History and Integration of the Psychoanalytic and Experimental Frameworks Matthew Hugh Erdelyi 2: Defense in Psychoanalytic Theory: Computation or Fantasy? Marshall Edelson 3: A Classification Theory of Defense Mardi J. Horowitz, Henry C. Markman, Charles H. Stinson, Bram Fridhandler, Jess H. Ghannam. 4: The Evidence for Repression: An Examination of Sixty Years of Research David S. Holmes 5: Subliminal Perception and Repression Howard Shevrin 6: Hypnosis, Dissociation, and Trauma: Hidden and Overt Observers David Spiegel 7: Unconscious Influences and Hypnosis Kenneth S. Bowers 8: Repression, Dissociation, and Hypnosis John F. Kihlstrom, Irene P. Hoyt. 9: Awareness, the Unconscious, and Repression: An Experimental Psychologist's Perspective Gordon H. Bower 10: Shame, Repression, Field Dependence, and Psychopathology Helen Block Lewis 11: Repression in College Men Followed for Half a Century George E. Vaillant 12: Repressive Style and Relationship Patterns - Three Samples Inspected Lester Luborsky, Paul Crits-Christoph, Keith J. Alexander. 13: Interpersonal Relatedness and Self-Definition: Two Personality Configurations and Their Implications for Psychopathology and Psychotherapy Sidney J. Blatt 14: The Construct Validity of the Repressive Coping Style Daniel A. Weinberger 15: Repression and the Inaccessibility of Emotional Memories Penelope J. Davis 16: Psychobiology of Repression and Health: A Systems Approach Gary E. Schwartz 17: Repressive Personality Style: Theoretical and Methodological Implications for Health and Pathology George A. Bonanno, Jerome L. Singer. 18: Summary: Beyond Repression and the Defenses Jerome L. Singer, Julie B. Sincoff. Index

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