What if it Didn’t All Begin and End with Containment? Toward a Leaky Sense of Self
- 17 September 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Body & Society
- Vol. 15 (3) , 33-45
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1357034x09337785
Abstract
In Esther Bick’s psychoanalytic theory, the infant’s relation to the world is mediated by the skin’s capacity to serve as a container for experience. As the infant develops, containment increasingly expresses cohesion of self, as fostered by the continued interaction with the caretaker. Through an emphasis on particular forms of interaction — forms that specifically involve skin-to-skin touch — an infant is given the receptacle necessary for eventual interactive self-sufficiency. But what if the skin were not a container? What if the skin were not a limit at which self begins and ends? What if the skin were a porous, topological surfacing of myriad potential strata that field the relation between different milieus, each of them a multiplicity of insides and outsides? This article explores these questions through Daniel Stern’s account of infancy.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Skin and the Self: Cultural Theory and Anglo-American PsychoanalysisBody & Society, 2009
- RelationscapesPublished by MIT Press ,2009