Nouveauté
Fragments of Self
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235247703
- EAN9798235247703
- Date de parution09/05/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Borderline personality organization has long occupied a contested space within psychology and psychiatry. Historically framed as a disorder of emotional instability, impulsivity, and identity disturbance, it has often been described through clinical observation rather than unified explanatory theory. As a result, its conceptualization has remained fragmented across competing paradigms, each capturing partial truths while leaving the broader architecture of the phenomenon underdefined.
Psychoanalytic traditions emphasized splitting, primitive defenses, and unstable object relations; attachment theory highlighted early relational insecurity and disorganized attachment patterns; cognitive and behavioral models focused on emotional dysregulation and maladaptive schemas; trauma-informed frameworks underscored the role of chronic invalidation and overwhelming affect; and contemporary neuroscience has begun to map correlates of network dysregulation and limbic hyperreactivity.
Yet these accounts, while valuable, often remain parallel rather than integrated. This work proposes an alternative approach: a unified, systems-based theory of borderline personality organization grounded in dynamic interaction across developmental, computational, affective, neural, and interpersonal levels. The central premise is that borderline phenomena are not isolated symptoms or trait deficits, but emergent properties of self-organizing systems shaped by early exposure to relational unpredictability.
Psychoanalytic traditions emphasized splitting, primitive defenses, and unstable object relations; attachment theory highlighted early relational insecurity and disorganized attachment patterns; cognitive and behavioral models focused on emotional dysregulation and maladaptive schemas; trauma-informed frameworks underscored the role of chronic invalidation and overwhelming affect; and contemporary neuroscience has begun to map correlates of network dysregulation and limbic hyperreactivity.
Yet these accounts, while valuable, often remain parallel rather than integrated. This work proposes an alternative approach: a unified, systems-based theory of borderline personality organization grounded in dynamic interaction across developmental, computational, affective, neural, and interpersonal levels. The central premise is that borderline phenomena are not isolated symptoms or trait deficits, but emergent properties of self-organizing systems shaped by early exposure to relational unpredictability.



