Introduction Part I. Consciousness and the self 1. Consciousness and the self 1.1. From consciousness to the self 1.2. Phenomenal consciousness and the minimal self 1.3.
Self-consciousness and the unconscious 1.4. The illusory self 2. The narrative self and the minimal self 2.1. The narrative self and personal identity 2.2. Empathic access and free indirect style 2.
3. Implicit elements and the narrative self 2.4. Pre-reflective self-awareness and the minimal self Part II. Varieties of the phenomenological unconscious 3. The unconscious in psychoanalysis and phenomenology 3.1. The passive and active unconscious 3.
2. Affective relief and repression 3.3. The implicit unconscious 4. Body memory and the unconscious 4.1. Affective relief and body memory 4.2.
The horizontal unconscious of body memory 4.3. Body memory and the affective unconscious Part III. Psychopathology and the minimal self 5. Phenomenological psychiatry of schizophrenia 5.1. The ipseity-disturbance model of schizophrenia 5.2.
Existential feelings and self-affection 5.3. From self-affection to hyperreflexivity Part IV. The unconscious and the minimal self 6. Time-consciousness and affective identity 6.1. The fragility of phenomenological unity 6.2.
The passive-implicit past and emotional memory 6.3. The affective schematism and traumatic subjectivity 6.4. Intrusive traumatic memory and PTSD 6.5. Retroactivity and Nachträglichkeit 7. The affective core self and affective identity 8.
Summary and conclusions References.