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Aesthetic experience.

François J Sirois1

  • 11115 des Laurentides, Suite 2, Cité de Québec, QC - G1S 3C2, Canada. sirois.rondeau@sympatico.ca

The International Journal of Psycho-Analysis
|February 23, 2008
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Psychoanalytic concepts like sublimation, reparation, and transformation explain how engaging with aesthetic objects helps manage anxiety. This process involves tolerating complex emotions, fostering aesthetic transference, and understanding the analysand

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Area of Science:

  • Psychoanalytic theory
  • Aesthetic experience
  • Clinical psychology

Background:

  • The clinical question of why individuals discuss aesthetic objects guides an exploration into the nature of aesthetic experience.
  • Psychoanalytic concepts offer frameworks for understanding the psychological dynamics involved in aesthetic engagement.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the psychic function of aesthetic feelings in mastering anxiety.
  • To explore the concepts of sublimation, reparation, and transformation in relation to aesthetic experience.
  • To elaborate on aesthetic transference as a form of narcissistic transference.

Main Methods:

  • Discussion of Freudian (sublimation), Kleinian (reparation), and object-relations (transformation) concepts.
  • Analysis of the role of aesthetic objects in fostering the tolerance of ambiguous feelings.
  • Examination of how aesthetic experiences relate to ego, id, and superego functions.

Main Results:

  • Aesthetic feelings aid in mastering anxiety by facilitating the transformation of passive experiences.
  • Contact with aesthetic objects promotes the tolerance of contradictory internal states.
  • Excessive aesthetic engagement can lead to fascination (awe) or bewitchment (claustrophobic anxiety).

Conclusions:

  • Aesthetic transference, where the analysand shares their internal state with the analyst, is a key aspect of this process.
  • The capacity to tolerate ambiguity and contrary feelings is central to healthy aesthetic engagement.
  • Psychoanalytic concepts provide valuable insights into the complex relationship between the self, anxiety, and aesthetic objects.