释义 |
psychodraˈmatic, a. [f. prec., after drama, dramatic.] 1. Of or by means of therapeutic psychodrama.
1937J. L. Moreno in Sociometry I. 25 When we apply psychodramatic principles to art, especially in the theatre, one notes that the presentation of the role is often interrupted by foreign elements, foreign to the role, betraying the private personality of the actor. 1977A. Sheridan tr. J. Lacan's Écrits ii. 9 Psychodramatic treatment..seeks its efficacity in the abreaction that it tries to exhaust on the level of play. 2. Pertaining to or of the nature of a psychodrama (sense 2).
1943Sewanee Rev. LI. 309 It could just as easily be accidental in the psychodramatic reverie of an insane and uneducated son grieving for his dead mother. 1946N.Y. Times 15 Oct. 29/1 ‘Frontiers of the Mind’, a collection of six dramatized case histories, will be presented..under the auspices of the Denes Psychodramatic Theatre. So psychodraˈmatics, (a) the use of psychodrama as therapy; (b) psychological dramatics; psychoˈdramatist, (a) one who directs or takes part in therapeutic psychodrama; (b) one who writes psychodramas (sense 2).
1937J. L. Moreno in Sociometry I. 10 But in interpersonal therapy, especially in one of its forms which can be called psychodramatics, the task is enormously more complicated. 1953J. L. Moreno Who shall Survive? p. xvi, Therefore I became a psychodramatist and roleplayer. 1957V. Nabokov Pnin ii. 45 He went on with his Slavic studies, she with her psychodramatics. 1973Nation Rev. (Melbourne) 31 Aug. 1455/2 These uncertainties..are the ruination of most politico-philosophical series produced by the modern school of psychodramatists. 1979C. E. Schorske Fin-de-Siècle Vienna vii. 345 The harsh psycho-dramatics of [the play] Murderer, Hope of Women helped the painter [sc. Kokoschka] to liberate himself. |