The joke envelope: A neglected precursor of the psychic envelope concept in freud's writing,

M.H. Spero

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The concepts of the primeval skin ego, psychic envelope, and related pre-ego containing and wrapping functions elaborated respectively iy Esther Bick, Didier Anzieu, and Francis Tustin occupy an important position in contemporary psychoanalytic theory and clinical practice. The psychic envelope begins as a virtual mental protostructure ("proto" because it is not yet based on fully symbolized representations) that holds the budding mind together pending furt her developments. With maturity, the enveloping functions adopt symbolized, metaphoric form (for example, the aesthetic use of cloth, the analytic framework), but can regress to more concrete and pathological forms. The aforemen tioned authors based their ideas on a cluster of specific allusions to the idea of a psychic covering, barrier, or envelope in Freud's work. Yet they neglected one reference, hidden in Freud's analysis of the structure ofjokes and humor: the "joke envelope"-die witzige Einkleidung. The present essay explores Freud's use of the term Einkleidung, in cluding his intriguing idea that a joke requires three people whereas a dream does not and the fact that Freud nowhere speaks of a "dream en velope. "1 take the "joke envelope" beyond its original context and posit a relationship between laughter and the early, normative traumas of breathing; crying, and loss, and the dawn of rhythmic envelopes that enable mentalization. Jokes and joking symbolically repeat the early rupture and rapture of breathing and self-other differentiation and the internalization of maternal containing and envelopment. copyright © 2009.,
Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)193
JournalPsychoanalytic Study of the Child,
Volume64
StatePublished - 2009

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