Fantasy and imagination – from psychoanalysis to cultural psychology
Abstract |
In his impressive historical chapter, Cornejo proposes to explore
the major contributions to the study of fantasy before a new,
modern psychology reduced it to mere reproductive imagination,
losing much of the depth of the initial notion. Fantasy was
forgotten by psychology, he argues, and let to other disciplines
emerging at the 19th century, such as psychoanalysis and
phenomenology. Against a psychology without soul, Cornejo invites
cultural psychology to draw on insights of the past to bring about
a theorization of imagination “with soul” in cultural psychology.
In this chapter, I propose to complement Cornejo’s project by exploring, first, fields neighboring psychology in which fantasy kept some of its initial richness, especially psychoanalysis and anthropology. Second, I recall that some approaches in psychology did maintain a non-rationalistic imagination after the creation of a scientific psychology. Third, drawing on these points, I finally suggest one possible way to theorize fantasy or imagination within cultural psychology. |
Keywords |
Imagination; fantasy; cultural psychology; psychoanalysis |
Citation | Zittoun, T. (2017). Fantasy and imagination – from psychoanalysis to cultural psychology. In B. Wagoner, I. Bresco de Luna & S. H. Awad (Eds.), The psychology of imagination: History, theory and new research horizons (pp. 137-150). Charlotte, NC: Information Age Publishing. |
Type | Book chapter (English) |
Year | 2017 |
Editor | Brady Wagoner, Ignascio Bresco De Luna, Sarah H. Awad |
Book title | The psychology of imagination: History, theory and new research horizons |
Publisher | Information Age Publishing (Charlotte, NC) |
Pages | 137-150 |
Related project | Imagination |