restitutive fantasy
English
Noun
restitutive fantasy (countable and uncountable, plural restitutive fantasies)
- (psychology) An imaginary reality created by someone to avoid what they cannot handle emotionally.
- 1963, Jesse E. Gordon, Personality and behavior, page 158:
- In restitutive fantasy, the person imagines some goal object which is not present in the environment: the fantasy thus serves as a replacement for the absent real object. The lonely child imagines his parents when they are away from him.
- 1985, Helen Vendler, The Odes of John Keats, page 256:
- If Keats cannot, in restitutive fantasy, resurrect "the teeming autumn, big with rich increase," his imagination will, in a second attempt, rise to another response in an effort to deny the obdurate blankness of the stubble-plains […]
- 2007, Leon Wurmser, Torment Me, But Don't Abandon Me:
- The patient's aim is therefore that the analyst replace a missing part; it is not the process of self-exploration. The enactment of such a restitutive fantasy serves the defense against the depressive affect about loss: the defense against mourning.
- 2013, Susan Miller, Shame in Context, page 116:
- Jeremy's father gave him a leg up into the restitutive fantasy of specialness by providing the adoption story of the “chosen” and “special” child.
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