In psychoanalysis, decathexis is the withdrawal of cathexis from an idea or instinctual object.[1]

Decathexis is the process of dis-investment of mental or emotional energy in a person, object, or idea.[2]

Narcissism

In narcissistic neurosis, cathexis is withdrawn from external instinctual objects (or rather their unconscious representations)[3] and turned on the ego – a process Freud highlighted in the Schreber case, and linked to the subject's ensuing megalomania.[4]

A similar decathexis of energy has been linked to the emergence of symptoms of hypochondriasis,[5] as well as of melancholia.[6]

André Green saw decathexis as the product of the death drive, blanking out the possibility of thinking by a process of what he called de-objectilizing.[7]

Grief

Decathexis of the lost person in grief was seen as a regular part of the mourning process by Freud, although later analysts have argued that such decathexis was rather the result of inhibited or partial mourning, not of successful mourning.[8]

See also

References

  1. Paul Denis, 'Decathexis'
  2. Hall, Calvin S. A Primer of Freudian Psychology. New York: Mentor, 1954.
  3. J-M Quinodoz, Reading Freud (2005) p. 145
  4. Sigmund Freud, Case Histories II (PFL 9) p. 208-11
  5. Otto Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (1946) p. 262
  6. Sigmund Freud, On Metapsychology (PFL 11) p. 266-7
  7. J-M Quinodoz, Reading Freud (2005) p. 134
  8. Lora H. Tessman, The Analyst's Analyst Within (2003) p. 236-7
  • Furman, R. A; Furman, E (1984). "Intermittent decathexis--a type of parental dysfunction". The International Journal of Psycho-Analysis. 65 ( Pt 4): 423–33. PMID 6544753.
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