<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<crossref_result xmlns="http://www.crossref.org/qrschema/3.0" version="3.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.crossref.org/qrschema/3.0 http://www.crossref.org/schemas/crossref_query_output3.0.xsd">
  <query_result>
    <head>
      <doi_batch_id>none</doi_batch_id>
    </head>
    <body>
      <query status="resolved">
        <doi type="book_content">10.14361/9783839464762-011</doi>
        <crm-item name="publisher-name" type="string">Transcript Verlag</crm-item>
        <crm-item name="prefix-name" type="string">Transcript Verlag</crm-item>
        <crm-item name="member-id" type="number">5471</crm-item>
        <crm-item name="citation-id" type="number">157687724</crm-item>
        <crm-item name="book-id" type="number">4680405</crm-item>
        <crm-item name="series-id" type="number">3852622</crm-item>
        <crm-item name="deposit-timestamp" type="number">2024020514130610800</crm-item>
        <crm-item name="owner-prefix" type="string">10.14361</crm-item>
        <crm-item name="last-update" type="date">2026-06-01T14:51:43Z</crm-item>
        <crm-item name="created" type="date">2024-02-05T08:15:35Z</crm-item>
        <crm-item name="citedby-count" type="number">0</crm-item>
        <doi_record>
          <crossref xmlns="http://www.crossref.org/xschema/1.1" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.crossref.org/xschema/1.1 http://doi.crossref.org/schemas/unixref1.1.xsd">
            <book book_type="edited_book">
              <book_series_metadata language="de">
                <series_metadata>
                  <titles>
                    <title>Lettre</title>
                  </titles>
                  <issn media_type="print">2703-013X</issn>
                  <issn media_type="electronic">2703-0148</issn>
                </series_metadata>
                <contributors>
                  <person_name sequence="first" contributor_role="editor">
                    <given_name>Martin</given_name>
                    <surname>Bartelmus</surname>
                    <ORCID authenticated="true">https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2844-2903</ORCID>
                  </person_name>
                  <person_name sequence="additional" contributor_role="editor">
                    <given_name>Friederike</given_name>
                    <surname>Danebrock</surname>
                  </person_name>
                </contributors>
                <titles>
                  <title>Therapie der Dinge?</title>
                  <subtitle>Materialität und Psychoanalyse in Literatur, Film und bildender Kunst</subtitle>
                </titles>
                <jats:abstract xmlns:jats="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/JATS1">
                  <jats:p>Psychoanalyse und neuer Materialismus scheinen zwei sich ausschließende theoretische und methodische Perspektiven zu sein. Steht bei der ersten das Subjekt im Fokus, ist es bei der zweiten ausgestrichen. Wird bei der ersten das Objekt in Relation zum Subjekt gedacht, soll es bei der zweiten aus dieser Abhängigkeit befreit werden. Die Beiträger*innen beschäftigen sich mit einer produktiven Verbindung von Psychoanalyse und neuem Materialismus. Sie loten sie anhand von Literatur, Film und Kunst aus und machen damit neue praxeologische Verbindungslinien für die Geisteswissenschaften sichtbar.</jats:p>
                </jats:abstract>
                <edition_number>1</edition_number>
                <publication_date media_type="print">
                  <month>12</month>
                  <day>06</day>
                  <year>2023</year>
                </publication_date>
                <publication_date media_type="online">
                  <month>12</month>
                  <day>04</day>
                  <year>2023</year>
                </publication_date>
                <isbn media_type="print">978-3-8376-6476-8</isbn>
                <isbn media_type="electronic">978-3-8394-6476-2</isbn>
                <publisher>
                  <publisher_name>transcript Verlag</publisher_name>
                  <publisher_place>Bielefeld, Germany</publisher_place>
                </publisher>
                <ai:program xmlns:ai="http://www.crossref.org/AccessIndicators.xsd" name="AccessIndicators">
                  <ai:free_to_read />
                  <ai:license_ref applies_to="vor">https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/</ai:license_ref>
                </ai:program>
                <doi_data>
                  <doi>10.14361/9783839464762</doi>
                  <resource>https://www.transcript-open.de/isbn/6476</resource>
                </doi_data>
              </book_series_metadata>
              <content_item component_type="chapter" publication_type="full_text">
                <contributors>
                  <person_name sequence="first" contributor_role="author">
                    <given_name>Joachim</given_name>
                    <surname>Harst</surname>
                    <ORCID authenticated="true">https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9459-3833</ORCID>
                  </person_name>
                </contributors>
                <titles>
                  <title>Machine Analysis</title>
                  <subtitle>Westworld and the Media History of Psychoanalysis</subtitle>
                </titles>
                <jats:abstract xmlns:jats="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/JATS1">
                  <jats:p>This paper explores the intersection of "Westworld" and psychoanalysis, examining how the popular TV series creatively uses psychoanalytic concepts to construct the 'psychic apparatus' of its android characters. The article delves into how Westworld uses the therapeutic conversation to explore the inner workings of its android characters and how the series plays with traditional psychoanalytic models to create a compelling narrative about the emergence of conscience. Additionally, the article examines what we can learn about the media history of psychoanalysis and its applicability to human-machine-interactions by examining its portrayal in popular media like Westworld.</jats:p>
                </jats:abstract>
                <publication_date media_type="print">
                  <month>12</month>
                  <day>06</day>
                  <year>2023</year>
                </publication_date>
                <publication_date media_type="online">
                  <month>12</month>
                  <day>04</day>
                  <year>2023</year>
                </publication_date>
                <pages>
                  <first_page>209</first_page>
                  <last_page>222</last_page>
                </pages>
                <ai:program xmlns:ai="http://www.crossref.org/AccessIndicators.xsd" name="AccessIndicators">
                  <ai:free_to_read />
                  <ai:license_ref applies_to="vor">https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/</ai:license_ref>
                </ai:program>
                <doi_data>
                  <doi>10.14361/9783839464762-011</doi>
                  <resource>https://www.transcript-open.de/doi/10.14361/9783839464762-011</resource>
                  <collection property="list-based" multi-resolution="unlock">
                    <item label="Inlibra" setbyID="tscr">
                      <resource>https://www.inlibra.com/10.14361/9783839464762-011</resource>
                    </item>
                  </collection>
                </doi_data>
              </content_item>
            </book>
          </crossref>
        </doi_record>
      </query>
    </body>
  </query_result>
</crossref_result>