Citations:agoraphobia

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English citations of agoraphobia

Noun: aversion to markets[edit]

1985 1996 1997 1998 2012 2019
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1985, Royal Society of Medicine, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine[1], volume 78, numbers 7–10, Academic Press, page 525:
    So another answer to the question ‘Where is psychoanalysis going’ is that it is coming out of the closet, is recovering from its agoraphobia, which in the early days may have been based on an objective perception of external reality, and is entering the market place where it can influence and allow itself to be influenced by group therapists, family therapists, existential therapists, cognitive psychologists and others.
  • 1996, Gary Westfahl, edited by George Edgar Slusser, Gary Westfahl, and Eric S. Rabkin, Science Fiction and Market Realities[2], University of Georgia Press, →ISBN, pages 18–9:
    Many literary critics seem to suffer from a similar agoraphobia, staying locked in their libraries while creating interpretations of texts that show little awareness of the people and circumstances that produced and influenced the works. [] All science fiction critics, then, should open their doors and join the commentators here in examining the rich, diverse, and fascinating agora of modern science fiction. In more ways than one, it will be a profitable journey.
  • 1997, Summary Proceedings: Of the Fifty-second Annual Meeting of the Board of Governors[3], volume 52, International Monetary Fund, →ISBN, →ISSN, page 206:
    Let me conclude as I have started, by pointing to Hong Kong as the antidote to those who would get “agoraphobia” from the developments in the regional currency and stock markets recently.
  • 1998 May 13, Deidre Lynch, The Economy of Character: Novels, Market Culture, and the Business of Inner Meaning[4], Chicago & London: University of Chicago Press, →ISBN, page 167:
    What Camilla suggests in its agoraphobia is the cooperative relation that links the marketing of beautiful exteriors to fiction that privileges the invisible “wonders of the Heart” (7).
  • 2012 September 13, Andrew Cumbers, Reclaiming Public Ownership: Making Space for Economic Democracy[5], Zed Books Ltd., →ISBN, page 139:
    However, those on the left also need to come to terms with the limits to Marxist thinking, its agoraphobia and its neglect of the relations between knowledge, pluralism and a genuine economic democracy.
  • 2019, Geoffrey Hodgson, Is Socialism Feasible?: Towards an Alternative Future[6], Edward Elgar Publishing, →ISBN, page 42:
    Macron broke from the Socialist party, partly because it was unable to overcome its congenital agoraphobia.