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Child Psychiatry: The Body as Affected by Psychological Factors
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 1, 1911-1938
In this article, Winnicott attempts to classify bodily changes and symptoms that belong to normal and abnormal emotional states. He discusses the understanding of personal instinctual life ...
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Letter to Martin James
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 5, 1955-1959
In this letter to Martin James, Winnicott thanks him for his comments and remarks that he thinks they are trying to say the same thing when they speak of illusion and disillusionment. ...

The First Year of Life: Modern Views on the Emotional Development
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 5, 1955-1959
Winnicott makes a short study of the first year of life for the infant, in particular his emotional development. He considers that the emotional dependence of the infant, on the mother at ...
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Environmental Needs; the Early Stages; Total Dependence and Essential Independence
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 3, 1946-1951
In this lecture to teachers, Winnicott is concerned with the introduction of external reality to the human infant. His thesis is that a mother manages her baby in order to give it the ...
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Letter to Victor Smirnoff
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 5, 1955-1959
In this letter to Victor Smirnoff, Winnicott responds to queries about the translation of his transitional objects paper into French and says that he is implying that actual experiencing ...
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Creativity and Its Origins
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 9, 1969 - 1971
In this paper, Winnicott discusses the origins of creativity, stating that creative apperception more than anything else is what makes the individual feel that life is worth living. He ...
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Introduction: Primitive Emotional Development
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 11, Human Nature and The Piggle
In the Introduction to Part IV, Winnicott states that he will describe primitive (early) emotional development in terms of the establishment of a relationship between the self and external ...
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Establishment of Relationship with External Reality
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 11, Human Nature and The Piggle
In Chapter 1, he proposes that, if all goes well, the mother can adapt to the infant such that they may have the illusion of having created all that it has received and enjoyed. He ...
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