The autistic pseudosignifier: Imaginary dialectization of signs in the clinic of autism

IF 1.1 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
L. Brenner
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Specificities in language and speech development are a defining feature of autism. Several psychoanalysts have hypothesized that these specificities originate in a unique mode of access to language that exclusively relies on signs rather than signifiers. Compared to the flexibility and dynamism of a language made of signifiers, a language made of signs is rigid, cumbersome, and poor in its capacity to encode complex concepts. This article investigates the supplementary methods that autistic subjects adopt to compensate for these setbacks, methods that enable them to encode complex concepts into their vocabulary using iconic signs. These methods are then developed into a psychoanalytic theory on the use of iconic signs in the strengthening of autistic language in the context of art therapy. A variety of case studies are then used to illustrate how newly gained access to a level of conceptual complexity can also bring dramatic changes to their lives.
自闭症伪能指:自闭症临床症状的想象性方言化
语言和言语发育的特殊性是自闭症的一个决定性特征。一些精神分析学家假设,这些特殊性起源于一种独特的语言获取模式,这种模式完全依赖于符号而非能指。与由能指构成的语言的灵活性和动态性相比,由符号构成的语言是僵化、繁琐的,并且编码复杂概念的能力较差。本文研究了自闭症受试者为弥补这些挫折而采取的补充方法,这些方法使他们能够使用标志性符号将复杂的概念编码到词汇中。然后,这些方法被发展成一种精神分析理论,即在艺术治疗的背景下,使用标志性符号来加强自闭症语言。然后使用各种案例研究来说明新获得的概念复杂性水平如何也会给他们的生活带来巨大的变化。
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来源期刊
Theory & Psychology
Theory & Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
8.30%
发文量
43
期刊介绍: Theory & Psychology is a fully peer reviewed forum for theoretical and meta-theoretical analysis in psychology. It focuses on the emergent themes at the centre of contemporary psychological debate. Its principal aim is to foster theoretical dialogue and innovation within the discipline, serving an integrative role for a wide psychological audience. Theory & Psychology publishes scholarly and expository papers which explore significant theoretical developments within and across such specific sub-areas as: cognitive, social, personality, developmental, clinical, perceptual or biological psychology.
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