Early and deep: two independent paradigms?

Translations of summary Did Winnicott replace or transform Freud's metapsychology? The author's aim is to explore more deeply the views developed in a previous paper based solely on Winnicott. Here the author draws on other studies to respond to two questions recently posed by Fulgencio concerning the meaning of the term metapsychology and the existence of a new topography in Winnicott's work. For many authors, Winnicott does not reject Freudian metapsychology and says nothing new in this field; in the field of paediatric anthropology, however, he focuses on dependence, and in the field of the living embodiment of the drives on being and self as different from ego. But Green notes the existence of a third topography, that of self/object, and also examines the vicissitudes of being by isolating the concept in Winnicott's work. For the author, however, being seems in continuity with his whole anthropological and ontological perspective; and when Winnicott introduces environmental factors of which the infant is unaware, he also introduces a heuristic distinction between early and deep: there is thus neither a rejection nor a reformulatation of the metapsychological theorization, but rather a coexistence of two paradigms. Le précoce et le profond: deux paradigmes indépendants? Winnicott a t‐il remplacé ou transformé la métapsychologie freudienne ? L'auteur propose d'approfondir un point de vue uniquement étayé précédemment sur l’œuvre de Winnicott lui‐même. Ici,...
Source: The International Journal of Psychoanalysis - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Tags: Original Article Source Type: research