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Donald Winnicott

    7 avril 1896 – 25 janvier 1971
    The Family and Individual Development
    Human Nature
    Deprivation and Delinquency
    Playing and Reality
    Home is Where We Start from
    Talking To Parents
    • This work illuminates the emotional and psychological issues in raising young children.

      Talking To Parents
    • Home is Where We Start from

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,3(35)Évaluer

      Brings together some of the author's works contributing to our understanding of the minds of children. This title includes essays that range in topic from 'The Concept of a Healthy Individual' and 'The Value of Depression' to 'Delinquancy as a sign of Hope'.

      Home is Where We Start from
    • Playing and Reality

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      4,2(2052)Évaluer

      Acknowledgements. Introduction. Transitional Objects and Transitional Phenomena. Dreaming, Fantasying, and Living: A Case-history Describing a Primary Dissociation. Playing: A Theoretical Statement. Playing: Creative Activity and the Search for the Self. Creativity and its Origins.

      Playing and Reality
    • Deprivation and Delinquency

      • 261pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      4,2(6)Évaluer

      D. W. Winnicott was one of the giants of child psychiatry and psychoanalysis. He argued eloquently for an increased sensitivity to children, their development and their needs.

      Deprivation and Delinquency
    • Winnicott's ideas are scattered through numerous clinical papers and popular expositions. He made only one attempt to write an overview of his ideas, and this is it.

      Human Nature
    • Represents a decade of writing from a thinker who was at the peak of his powers as perhaps the leading post-war figure in developmental psychiatry. This book chronicles the complex inner lives of human beings, from the first encounter between mother and newborn, through the 'doldrums' of adolescence, to maturity.

      The Family and Individual Development
    • The Piggle

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      4,1(191)Évaluer

      Between the age of two and five, a little girl nicknamed 'the Piggle' - disturbed by the birth of a younger sister - visited Dr Winnicott on sixteen occasions. This book offers an account of her visits, accompanied by excerpts from letters written to the analyst by the child's parents and a commentary by Dr Winnicott.

      The Piggle
    • Covering child development, this work explores problems of the only child, of stealing and lying, shyness, sex education in schools and the roots of aggression. It provides insight into child behaviour and parental attitudes.

      The Child, the Family, and the Outside World