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Showing 5 results for Freud


Volume 9, Issue 6 (3-2018)
Abstract

The present study, as a research in the field of language and gender, aimed at investigating the Persian spoken by women in Kermanshah city based on Lakoff’s dominance approach. Research in the field of language and gender began by Robin Lakoff (1973, 1975). She postulated that the language of women is different from men. According to her, women have a tendency to use the linguistic features that reflect and reinforce a subordinate role in society’s power structure. These linguistic features include "hedges", "indirect requests", "tag questions", "fillers", "and empty adjectives “and” up talk". She further suggested that women use "super polite forms" and have a "poorer sense of humor" than men. The purpose of this study was to investigate, describe and categorize the specific features in women’s speech. It further analyzed the impact of age on the frequency of using these speech features. The data of the present study were collected using questionnaires and interviews from 90 urban middle-class Persian-speaking women of Kermanshah in three different age groups with diploma or no academic degree. The authors of this study, in addition to examining the language of Kermanshahi women in line with Lakoff’s approach and explaining them based on "Freud's defense mechanism theory", succeeded to add several other features based on the science of psychology. These new and innovative speech features which were pointed out in the present study are: "childlike speech and tone", "stretched sounds", "histrionic language", "avoidant language", and "animism". The research findings were analyzed quantitatively using chi-square test, and qualitatively adopting the framework of Freud's defense mechanisms theory. The findings of the study demonstrate that age creates a significant difference in the frequency of using most of these speech features. Save for the two features of "rising tone in statements" and "tag questions", all the other features of Lakoff's approach and the features discovered by the researchers exist in women's speech, with different frequencies though, and can be generalizable to the population at large.
The table below presents both group of features of women’s language by Lakoff and the authors:
 
Features of the Persian language spoken women (Kermanshahi)
Features included in Lakoff's approach Features Discovered by Researchers
Hedging Childlike speech and tone
Color terms Stretched sound
Empty adjectives Avoidant language
Super polite forms Histrionic of choice
Weak quantifiers Animism 
Expletives  
Empathic stress  
 
 

Volume 9, Issue 36 (10-2012)
Abstract

The objective of this research was to produce fermented dairy beverage with Propionibacterium freudenreichii ssp. shermanii and study the microbiological characteristics immediately after fermentation and during cold storage. In this study, impact of two process variables of incubation temperature and inoculation ratio on microbiological characteristics was studied by full factorial design. For the preparation of the fermented dairy beverage, a mixed culture of Lactobacillus acidophilus and Propionibacterium freudenreichii ssp. shermanii was grown at the ratio of 1:2, 1:4 and 1:8 and incubation was performed at 30, 35 and 40°C until the pH reached 4 ± 0.1. Cell count of L. acidophilus was conducted on MRS Agar and incubation at 37 °C. Enumeration of P. freudenreichii ssp. shermanii was done on sodium lactate agar (NaLa agar) medium and incubation at 30 °C. In the most suitable condition for propionic acid production, profile of viability of microorganisms was determined in intervals of 0, 7, 14, 21 and 28 days. Also, phase separation of produced beverage was studied during the first week of storage at 4°C. The maximum viable cell count of P. freudenreichii ssp. shermanii was occurred by inoculation ratio of 1 to 4 and incubation temperature of 30 °C. There was an adverse and significant (P < 0.05) relationship between viability of P. freudenreichii ssp. shermanii and incubation temperature. The maximum cell count of L. acidophilus was observed in a mixed culture of L. acidophilus and P. freudenreichii ssp. shermanii at ratio of 1 to 8 and incubation temperature of 35°C. Considerable decreased cell counts of P. freudenreichii ssp. shermanii and L. acidophilus were obtained during the first and the last weeks of cold storage, respectively.  

Volume 9, Issue 37 (12-2012)
Abstract

The objective of this research was to produce fermented dairy beverage with Propionibacterium freudenreichii ssp. shermanii and study the microbiological characteristics immediately after fermentation and during cold storage. In this study, impact of two process variables of incubation temperature and inoculation ratio on microbiological characteristics was studied by full factorial design. For the preparation of the fermented dairy beverage, a mixed culture of Lactobacillus acidophilus and Propionibacterium freudenreichii ssp. shermanii was grown at the ratio of 1:2, 1:4 and 1:8 and incubation was performed at 30, 35 and 40°C until the pH reached 4 ± 0.1. Cell count of L. acidophilus was conducted on MRS Agar and incubation at 37 °C. Enumeration of P. freudenreichii ssp. shermanii was done on sodium lactate agar (NaLa agar) medium and incubation at 30 °C. In the most suitable condition for propionic acid production, profile of viability of microorganisms was determined in intervals of 0, 7, 14, 21 and 28 days. Also, phase separation of produced beverage was studied during the first week of storage at 4°C. The maximum viable cell count of P. freudenreichii ssp. shermanii was occurred by inoculation ratio of 1 to 4 and incubation temperature of 30 °C. There was an adverse and significant (P < 0.05) relationship between viability of P. freudenreichii ssp. shermanii and incubation temperature. The maximum cell count of L. acidophilus was observed in a mixed culture of L. acidophilus and P. freudenreichii ssp. shermanii at ratio of 1 to 8 and incubation temperature of 35°C. Considerable decreased cell counts of P. freudenreichii ssp. shermanii and L. acidophilus were obtained during the first and the last weeks of cold storage, respectively.

Volume 10, Issue 48 (12-2022)
Abstract

As a reflection of the collective unconscious and human psychological struggles, folk tales are one of the best sources of psychoanalytical analysis, especially the theories of children's gender. By projecting many of their conflicts on the characters of the story, the audience of these fairy tales - especially children - can externalize their aggressive impulses and achieve a kind of psychological and emotional integration while symbolically experiencing some of their repressed emotions. Sigmund Freud, as the founder of psychoanalysis, has repeatedly emphasized the importance of classical folk literature and has built many important concepts of this knowledge on myths and legends. One of the key concepts in the psychoanalytic theory is the Oedipus complex, which is, according to Freud, the responsibility of every child who steps into the arena of existence to overcome it. On the other hand, the Kurdish language has one of the richest popular literatures due to its dialect diversity and pristine geography. In this article, the author analyses the legend of Shirzad Shirpanj from Kurdish folk literature from a psychoanalytical perspective and demonstrates the extent to which this story conforms to the theory of the Oedipus complex and what solutions it offers to overcome this fateful path. In this story, the Oedipal conflict started in the dominance of the son and father competition, and finally, with the acceptance of the father's position and the decline of the Oedipal impulses, psychological maturity and inner peace emerge.
Aidin Keikhaee, Shannon Bell,
Volume 23, Issue 1 (2-2016)
Abstract

The concept of anxiety occupies a crucial position in early Heidegger’s writings. Most prominently, it appears in Being and Time (1927) and “What is Metaphysics?” (1929) as a structurally central concept. After 1920s, Heidegger began to use the term much less frequently, leading some scholars to suggest a change in Heidegger’s view of the significance of the concept of anxiety. In this essay, we argue that central to the understanding of the role of anxiety in Heidegger’s thought is the fundamental difference between Heideggerian and psychological anxiety. This distinction is crucial as it is directly connected to the idea of the ontological difference, i.e., the difference between the ontical and the ontological, between beings and the Being of beings. Psychological descriptions of anxiety remain at the level of the ontical and, therefore, fall short of comprehending the ontological meaning of Heideggerian anxiety, which is one of Dasein’s basic possibilities of Being. Equipped with such an ontological understanding, we argue that the concept of anxiety remained central to Heidegger’s thought, early and late alike. We also suggest that Heidegger’s less frequent use of the term anxiety after “What Is Metaphysics?” could possibly be associated with his recognition that its terminological similarity with psychological anxiety may become a source of misunderstandings. Moreover, in the last section of the essay which functions as an addendum, we engage with Freud’s analysis of the uncanny and examine its relation to Heidegger’s Being-not-at-home. We argue that although Freud’s analysis of the uncanny does, in a sense, open up horizons beyond the reach of empirical psychology, his quasi-scientific quest for causal explanation ultimately remains within the framework of an ontical analysis.    

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