<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<XML><RECORDS>
<RECORD>
	<REFERENCE_TYPE>31</REFERENCE_TYPE>
	<AUTHORS>
		<AUTHOR>Howard F. Stein</AUTHOR>
	</AUTHORS>
	<YEAR>2008</YEAR>
	<TITLE>THE INFLUENCE OF PSYCHOGEOGRAPHY UPON THE CONDUCT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: Clinical and Metapsychological Considerations</TITLE>
	<ABSTRACT>Psychogeography begins with the vicissitudes of selfhood in a human body and&lt;br /&gt;
proceeds outward to encompass the world. The issue of boundaries takes us to&lt;br /&gt;
the heart of psychogeography. Symbolic group-boundaries have the quality of&lt;br /&gt;
dreamlike condensations. Through boundaries we express anxiety over body&lt;br /&gt;
integrity or cohesion versus disorganization, maleness versus femaleness,&lt;br /&gt;
pleasure versus unpleasure, animateness versus inanimateness, security&lt;br /&gt;
versus danger, symbiosis versus emotional separation (representational&lt;br /&gt;
differentiation). How these all are resolved finds ultimate expression in&lt;br /&gt;
the delineation of inside from outside: what and who are to be included in&lt;br /&gt;
the group, and what and who are to be excluded from it.
</ABSTRACT>
	<URL>http://www.psych-culture.com/docs/stein_psychogeography.html</URL>
</RECORD>
</RECORDS></XML>
