Includes bibliographical references (p. [126]-134)
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Machine generated contents note: pt. I Historical Facts: Depression and Other Socially Shared Representations of Pain in Western Civilization -- ch. One Sadness and Black Bile -- ch. Two Sadness, Error and Sin -- ch. Three Sadness and Human Societies -- pt. II Clinical Facts -- ch. Four Looking through a Distortive Mirror: Descriptive Psychopathology of Depression from a Psychoanalytic Perspective -- ch. Five Encountering Depression in the Context of Mental Health Services: The Contribution from Psychoanalytic Literature -- pt. III The Model -- ch. Six A Model of the Process of Formation of Depressive Symptoms -- ch. Seven Epistemological Observations
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
Over the past few decades, psychoanalysis and dynamic psychiatry have been steadily stepping back from a key role in the understanding and treatment of depressive disorders