
- 248 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Dreams in Myth, Medicine, and Movies
About this book
Cinemaāinvented just before psychoanalysis formally developedāprimed the public and scholars to rethink ideas about dreams. The author describes how surrealist artists purposely applied Freudian dream theories to their art to make the public aware of modern ideas about dreams. Most of our current cultural consciousness about the psychological value of dreams is traced to classical and contemporary cinema. This work examines how residuals of past approaches to dreams make conceptions of dreams in psychoanalysis and science more complex than ever today. Scholars and students in the fields of psychology, psychiatry, cinema, medicine, and religion may find this volume useful. The book also examines academic psychiatry's increased emphasis in dream study on neuropsychiatry and psychopharmocology, as well as managed care's decreased compensation for dream therapy.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Dreams in Myth, Medicine, and Movies