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    • Oral Stage (Birth to 1 year) The Oral Stage is the first stage of Sigmund Freud’s theory of psychosexual development, occurring from birth until approximately 18 months.
    • Anal Stage (1 to 3 years) The anal stage is the second stage of psychosexual development happens between the ages of 18 months and three years. During the anal stage, the libido becomes focused on the anus, and the child derives great pleasure from defecating.
    • Phallic Stage (3 to 6 years) The phallic stage, which spans ages three to six, is the third phase of psychosexual development, identified by Sigmund Freud.
    • Latency Stage (6 years to puberty) The latency stage is the fourth stage of psychosexual development, spanning six years to puberty. The libido is dormant during this stage, and no further psychosexual development occurs (latent means hidden).
  2. Freud’s concept of the bodily ego is described as a projection of a surface and suggests that projecting onto a surface different than one’s own body is possible. Coupled with the mimetic function and to employ this term in the clinic, I refer to the bodily ego as the “phantasy body.”

  3. In psychoanalysis, the body is an erogenized body. It is constituted as an object for another self. Similarly, in phenomenology, the body is an own body in first instance. It is the body of a self, rather than a living body and a material body.

    • Paulina Monjaraz Fuentes
  4. Nov 5, 2021 · In her article “Our sudden switch to teleanalysis during a pandemic. Finding our psychoanalytic footing,” Lena Theodorou-Ehrlich fathoms the problems that the absence of the body of the other and the presence of danger for the body pose.

    • Grigoris Maniadakis, Marco Conci
    • 2021
  5. Apr 26, 2017 · In psychoanalysis, the body is an erogenized body. It is constituted as an object for another self. Similarly, in phenomenology, the body is an own body in first instance. It is the...

  6. In psychoanalysis, the body is an erogenized body. It is constituted as an object for another self. Similarly, in phenomenology, the body is an own body in first instance. It is the body of a self, rather than a living body and a material body.

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