{"id":2127,"date":"2024-10-29T18:18:52","date_gmt":"2024-10-29T21:18:52","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue?post_type=articulos_revista&#038;p=2127"},"modified":"2024-10-31T17:37:54","modified_gmt":"2024-10-31T20:37:54","slug":"myth","status":"publish","type":"articulos_revista","link":"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/en\/articulos_revista\/myth\/","title":{"rendered":"Myth"},"content":{"rendered":"<?xml encoding=\"utf-8\" ?><p>\n<style type=\"text\/css\" data-created_by=\"avia_inline_auto\" id=\"style-css-av-qzew9b-4d328cb87489e5ed2104e38c1c1765f3\">\n.avia-section.av-qzew9b-4d328cb87489e5ed2104e38c1c1765f3{\nbackground-color:#f2f2f2;\nbackground:linear-gradient( to bottom, #f2f2f2, #ffffff, #f2f2f2 );\n}\n<\/style>\n<div id='av_section_1'  class='avia-section av-qzew9b-4d328cb87489e5ed2104e38c1c1765f3 main_color avia-section-small avia-shadow  avia-builder-el-0  el_before_av_section  avia-builder-el-first  avia-bg-style-scroll container_wrap fullsize'  ><div class='container av-section-cont-open' ><main  role=\"main\" itemprop=\"mainContentOfPage\"  class='template-page content  av-content-full alpha units'><div class='post-entry post-entry-type-page post-entry-2127'><div class='entry-content-wrapper clearfix'>\n\n<style type=\"text\/css\" data-created_by=\"avia_inline_auto\" id=\"style-css-av-m2uy3rmd-cfa0ba46295d52ebcff5bd3290617b7c\">\n#top .av-special-heading.av-m2uy3rmd-cfa0ba46295d52ebcff5bd3290617b7c{\npadding-bottom:10px;\n}\nbody .av-special-heading.av-m2uy3rmd-cfa0ba46295d52ebcff5bd3290617b7c .av-special-heading-tag .heading-char{\nfont-size:25px;\n}\n.av-special-heading.av-m2uy3rmd-cfa0ba46295d52ebcff5bd3290617b7c .av-subheading{\nfont-size:15px;\n}\n<\/style>\n<div  class='av-special-heading av-m2uy3rmd-cfa0ba46295d52ebcff5bd3290617b7c av-special-heading-h1 blockquote modern-quote modern-centered  avia-builder-el-1  avia-builder-el-no-sibling '><div class='av-subheading av-subheading_above'><p>REVIEW N&deg; 14 | YEAR 2015 \/ 1<\/p>\n<\/div><h1 class='av-special-heading-tag '  itemprop=\"headline\"  >MYTH<\/h1><div class=\"special-heading-border\"><div class=\"special-heading-inner-border\"><\/div><\/div><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div><\/div><\/main><!-- close content main element --><\/div><\/div><div id='av_section_2'  class='avia-section av-pr9e1b-94ece38f523e025d8ed39e6f7594b8b1 main_color avia-section-small avia-no-border-styling  avia-builder-el-2  el_after_av_section  el_before_av_section  avia-bg-style-scroll container_wrap fullsize'  ><div class='container av-section-cont-open' ><div class='template-page content  av-content-full alpha units'><div class='post-entry post-entry-type-page post-entry-2127'><div class='entry-content-wrapper clearfix'>\n<div  class='flex_column av-o6fzrz-f4304b293c6806dd00b0988ab95d1357 av_one_fifth  avia-builder-el-3  el_before_av_one_half  avia-builder-el-first  first flex_column_div  '     ><div  class='avia-buttonrow-wrap av-m2uy44cj-469a63750bb8915a6b4b25736d5492d2 avia-buttonrow-left  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av-lwujbj-bf6ebb42ae1ea01a5d96329909cb9bdd av_one_half  avia-builder-el-5  el_after_av_one_fifth  el_before_av_one_fourth  flex_column_div  '     ><section  class='av_textblock_section av-kp7w3z-134e8a417623447661df996705ed12de '   itemscope=\"itemscope\" itemtype=\"https:\/\/schema.org\/CreativeWork\" ><div class='avia_textblock'  itemprop=\"text\" ><p><div class=\"escritores\">Author: <a href=\"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/en\/escritor\/nicolo-anna-maria-en\/\">NICOL\u00d2 Anna Maria<\/a><\/div><div class=\"escritores\">Language: <a href=\"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/en\/idioma_articulo\/english\/\">English<\/a> - <a href=\"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/en\/idioma_articulo\/french\/\">French<\/a> - <a href=\"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/en\/idioma_articulo\/spanish\/\">Spanish<\/a><\/div><div class=\"palabras-clave\"><div class=\"secciones_revista\">Section: <span><a href=\"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/en\/secciones_revista\/dictionary\/\">DICTIONARY<\/a><\/span> 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>Descargar PDF<\/span><span class='avia_button_icon avia_button_icon_right avia-iconfont avia-font-entypo-fontello' data-av_icon='\ue82d' data-av_iconfont='entypo-fontello' ><\/span><\/a>\n\n<style type=\"text\/css\" data-created_by=\"avia_inline_auto\" id=\"style-css-av-7ysz67-88fb99dd216cbe18c413d22bec22831a\">\n#top #wrap_all .avia-button.av-7ysz67-88fb99dd216cbe18c413d22bec22831a{\nborder-radius:50px 50px 50px 50px;\ntransition:all 0.4s ease-in-out;\nmargin-bottom:5px;\nmargin-right:3px;\nmargin-left:3px;\n}\n#top #wrap_all .avia-button.av-7ysz67-88fb99dd216cbe18c413d22bec22831a:hover .avia_button_background{\nborder-radius:50px 50px 50px 50px;\n}\n<\/style>\n<a href='https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/10\/14-Vocabulaire-Le-mythe.pdf'  class='avia-button av-7ysz67-88fb99dd216cbe18c413d22bec22831a avia-icon_select-yes-right-icon avia-size-large av-icon-on-hover avia-color-theme-color'  target=\"_blank\"  rel=\"noopener noreferrer\"  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avia-color-theme-color'  target=\"_blank\"  rel=\"noopener noreferrer\"  aria-label=\"Download PDF\"><span class='avia_iconbox_title' >Download PDF<\/span><span class='avia_button_icon avia_button_icon_right avia-iconfont avia-font-entypo-fontello' data-av_icon='\ue82d' data-av_iconfont='entypo-fontello' ><\/span><\/a>\n<\/div><\/p><\/div><div  class='flex_column av-3whhjj-d726d5dfe39f9a08febcfae210155501 av_four_fifth  avia-builder-el-14  el_after_av_one_fifth  avia-builder-el-last  flex_column_div  '     ><p>\n<style type=\"text\/css\" data-created_by=\"avia_inline_auto\" id=\"style-css-av-m2uy9qnf-77c1293dc05262473345b660298595e6\">\n#top .av-special-heading.av-m2uy9qnf-77c1293dc05262473345b660298595e6{\nmargin:-10px -10px -10px -10px;\npadding-bottom:10px;\n}\nbody .av-special-heading.av-m2uy9qnf-77c1293dc05262473345b660298595e6 .av-special-heading-tag .heading-char{\nfont-size:25px;\n}\n.av-special-heading.av-m2uy9qnf-77c1293dc05262473345b660298595e6 .av-subheading{\nfont-size:15px;\n}\n<\/style>\n<div  class='av-special-heading av-m2uy9qnf-77c1293dc05262473345b660298595e6 av-special-heading-h3 blockquote modern-quote  avia-builder-el-15  el_before_av_hr  avia-builder-el-first '><h3 class='av-special-heading-tag '  itemprop=\"headline\"  >VOCABULARY<\/h3><div class=\"special-heading-border\"><div class=\"special-heading-inner-border\"><\/div><\/div><\/div><div  class='hr av-33213z-4396ce50b12bb5cc59dc05da0ce3791a hr-default  avia-builder-el-16  el_after_av_heading  el_before_av_textblock '><span class='hr-inner '><span class=\"hr-inner-style\"><\/span><\/span><\/div><section  class='av_textblock_section av-m2uy8vdl-05388a02f29812409c22edbe885ff637 '   itemscope=\"itemscope\" itemtype=\"https:\/\/schema.org\/CreativeWork\" ><div class='avia_textblock'  itemprop=\"text\" ><h3><strong>MYTH<\/strong><a href=\"#_ftn1\" name=\"_ftnref1\" target=\"_blank\"><sup>[1]<\/sup><\/a><\/h3>\n<p>Myth&nbsp; may be defined as &ldquo;a multidimensional structure, a code between levels of reality that starts as an unconscious group fantasy, but in time and with further generations becomes one of the manifestations of the family unconscious. It is a source of identifications and has a prescriptive function which organises knowledge and prescribes how reality is to be read&rdquo;.&nbsp; It can also take on a defensive function in pathological situations (Nicol&ograve;, 1987).<\/p>\n<p>The word myth derives from the Greek <em>mythos <\/em>and is primitively and essentially the result of words that create meaning. As Ka&euml;s points out&nbsp; it is a form of public speech. The content of those words is a thought. The author gives us an overview of the history of myth. In the Homeric poems, for a process of secondary specialization, myth has the value of a fiction, a fictional story, a fable, or allegory. Myth is opposed to reality but at the same time is a true discourse. At the end of XIX (nineteenth) century, the myth was thought to show an idealized depiction of a past state of humanity, and its origin. In the twentieth century myth has a decisive role in the representation of a community (i.e. L&eacute;vi-Strauss, Structural Anthropology, 1958), or an individual (i.e. Lacan, The myth of the neurotic individual, 1979). For Freud there was a close link between myths and dreams. They both represent two forms of imagination, but they are also two ways to represent a meaning which needs to be interpreted, a primordial sense about the past and the past of the psyche of humanity. Although for Freud dreams are the privileged way to access the unconscious, myths also allowed him to explore it.<\/p>\n<p>Ka&euml;s notes how by drawing on myths (but also on legends and fairy tales), Freud invented the Oedipus complex, narcissism, and the concept of uncanny. By inventing a myth he also reveals, in <em>Totem and Taboo<\/em> (Freud, 1912-1914,) the removed part of the Oedipus complex.<\/p>\n<p>This mythopoeic use of the myth illustrates the transformation of the relationship between ghost, myth and theory, through subsequent reversals, which (what is &lsquo;which&rsquo; referring to?) is employed by Freud as a method.&nbsp; For Freud, myths, legends and fairy tales, consist of psychic material and are related to the more primitive parts of the psyche.<\/p>\n<p>According to Ka&euml;s, dreams and myths are made from the same basic psychic material, but this material is organized according to a different logic and different functions. Dreams and myths are two kinds of discourse that have a meaning which is both essential and obscure. They both are two forms of the imaginary, the imaginary as explorer of the unknown (the dream) and the imaginary that explains it (the myth). The dream is the imagination of what is intimate; while the myth is the imagination of what is public, collective, social. In this perspective, it is appropriate to try to capture the way in which dreams and myths have two different fates and articulate their relations in groups, organised to capture the different&nbsp; steps and transformations between what is private, what is shared and what is public.<\/p>\n<p>The function of myths in a family is more complex than what has been described by Malinowski (1926) and Ferreira (1963). A myth does not only tell a story, but speaks through its narrative.<\/p>\n<p>The narrative material that forms the myth is the tool through which a myth communicates. Thus, as L&eacute;vi-Strauss (1962) said, it is rather a semiotic object, like a language where &ldquo;a certain significant material (the narrative) has the function of conveying a certain meaning&rdquo;. For this reason, a myth links different levels of reality and cannot be read only at the anthropological, psychoanalytical, or sociological level. All these levels are present. A myth tells us how reality is made, thought of, and perceived. It also links different levels of reality and its great importance derives from its ability to be a true code between the levels. While a myth seems to describe reality, it also teaches and prescribes how reality should be read (Nicol&ograve;, 1987, 1997); it is therefore both a way to convey knowledge, of an event and of rules, and a code of behaviour. In this way, a narrative or iconic system is turned into a prescriptive system that invests the level of acting action (a self-fulfilling prophecy).<\/p>\n<p>Nevertheless a myth is not always a looming curse. Comparing this point of view to what Bion (1961, 1965) says about public myths considered as a reservoir from which symbols can be tapped, as a primitive form of preconception, one can realise that it is only the meeting of the myth carried on by the family with that specific member, his elaboration skills, and his experience that will produce a specific effect. To borrow Bion&rsquo;s words, myth is a precursor of our knowledge that meeting up with reality gives rise to conception. Its effects do not only depend on the family&rsquo;s functioning but also on each member&rsquo;s personality<\/p>\n<p>Furthermore, a myth is a source of identifications. It works through, builds, and rebuilds an experience, a traumatic event thereby transfiguring it, deferring it to further elaborations and further impacts with other experiences.<\/p>\n<p>Even if a group and a family have a great capacity for elaborating traumas because they have easier access to the coexistence of more primitive and more evolved levels, this functioning might encounter obstacles.<\/p>\n<p>A myth can be a tool for this activity but does not allow a full elaboration, being in itself an obstacle. To the extent that a family builds a myth starting from a real life event or from a traumatic experience, it is also creating a metaphor with which it tries to master, contain, and represent the powerful emotions characterising that event. Therefore, a myth is an effort at elaborating an experience and a trauma and is grafted in the family group when a complete elaboration fails. Myth is an elaboration underway. If the elaboration had been full, a complete digestion, there would be repression and forgetting. But, as this is a difficult function, the group becomes a tool for elaboration and for passing on what couldn&rsquo;t elaborate through and across generations.<\/p>\n<p>Enza Pulino Fidelio, quoting Barthes, argues that a myth depletes, distorts, and suspends the sense of an event. We could say that historical (geographic, environmental, temporal) data is cancelled. What is left in its place is a plot, a network of links, &ldquo;a system of values that becomes a system of facts&rdquo; (2001, p. 82). Yet that event could be so disrupting that it completely overwhelms the subject&rsquo;s or the group&rsquo;s ability to contain it. A first containment effort is represented by the myth.<\/p>\n<p>Nevertheless in a group holes can form in elaboration and can be passed on from one generation to the other. Granjon (2000) defines these gaps as &ldquo;rough objects, containers of negative&rdquo; which don&rsquo;t allow further elaboration. In her conceptualisation of the mythopoeic function in groups and families she describes in particular how myths&nbsp; create a structure for both&nbsp; family thinking and the individual psyche. Myths, according to her view, carry and contain what &ldquo;keeps together&rdquo;, and are an expression of the narcissistic contract which ties the individual to the group. Nevertheless myths are not only a way of constructing meanings,&nbsp; but also a tool for reconstructing and deconstructing them and are therefore modelled around a negative, often tragic sense.<\/p>\n<p>All families have their own myth. In some families it can play a structuring function, but can be disproved, elaborated or changed by any member. When this happens, each member can find his own personal route. In families where this is not possible, because their functioning is based on control, and the ego of each member is fragile, a family myth becomes the only safety net. Acting in the unconscious dimension, rather than in one known to all, it ends up becoming a tyrannical law that prevents any trespassing. In this sense it plays an important function in the most difficult moments and becomes a defensive tool with which the group can face anxieties about catastrophic change.<\/p>\n<p>In some situations myths have a pathological meaning but in others a myth can be mitigated, disproved or trespassed upon by any family member. In families where the ego of each member is fragile, a family myth plays functions as a substitute ego and cannot be easily changed. In fact it counters fragmentation and the loss of continuity, by maintaining the traditions of a social group and providing a model where the present can only be a repetition of the past.<\/p>\n<p>Some authors distinguish between various types of family myths (heroism, seduction, filiation, etc.) (Nagy, Stierlin, Byng Hall, Eiguer). Eiguer (2001) states that a myth manifests itself in the form of a narration which implies a belief shared by the whole family. He states that a myth has no author or origin. The story has an allegorical structure and its function is calming: it resolves contradictions, overcomes suffering and helps to find the courage to fulfil a difficult project. Moreover it creates ties between members. Nevertheless, it is important to understand the features of dysfunctional myths. A first criterion could be rigidity and timelessness or, conversely, a flexibility that allows for regression and reintegration.&nbsp; Another criterion is how much a myth is secret and sequestered from family life. In some situations the myth&rsquo;s defensive organisation corresponds to that defensive construction that Steiner (2004) calls &ldquo;retreat&rdquo;. Seriously ill adolescents use these fantastic retreats, which can be masturbatory or delusional. In adolescence this fantastic production, when it is not excessive and does not sequester the mind, can be useful for growth or as a defence from imbalances. An additional aspect of myths is their relation with identification. A myth is a source of identification both for the individual member and for the family, providing a sense of group identity. Another aspect of myths is that they may become a source of alienating and abusing identifications: situations where the subject builds part of his identity on a mythical character that cannot be easily changed because it does not belong to the present and has lost its real features, having been transfigured by the projections of all family members. These identifications become alienating because they alienate the subject from himself, aggressively enslave him to an alien identity and increasingly invade his true and spontaneous personality.<\/p>\n<p>As Garc&iacute;a Badaracco (2000) noticed, they are pathological and pathogenetic, in that they exert a constant action. But they are very dangerous and not easy to address because they do not concern only one member but all the other members tied to the one the analysts are working with. Using the example of the heroic grandfather, a son will identify with such an ancestor in order to try to replicate his deeds or, on the contrary will feel overwhelmed and unable to stand up to him. Moreover, a parent can also be enmeshed, possibly hoping that his son can replicate the deeds of a celebrated ancestor, thus adding the burden of his own expectations on the son. Relieving oneself from these identifications and\/or transforming them can then become a goal not only for the son, but also for his parent(s) and all other family members.<\/p>\n<p>(As Freud taught us, one cannot defeat an enemy in effigy. Myths are the transformation of a system of values and, one could add, of rules and relationships into a system of facts, in an articulated form. So in the analytic scenario we need to change this emotional form of the myth (as Pulino, 2001 says), turning it into a meaning that can be elaborated, represented, and then forgotten. To enact a myth can be the best way to give back time to an atemporal element in the here and now in order to deconstruct it, starting from its unreal dimensions, rebuild it with its historical dimensions, and extract it from the family&rsquo;s unconscious to make each member aware of it. In &nbsp;analytic sessions the therapist must play the function of reconstruction-construction of the myth through the narrative of all family members present. Most of all he will have to highlight how the myth acts in the here and now and determines identity, challenging what each member knows and reconstructs, putting them in touch and in opposition with the aspect of our personality that wants to escape it and decode it.)<\/p>\n<hr>\n<h3><strong>References <\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>Bion W.R. (1961). <em>Experiences in Groups and Other Papers<\/em>. London: Tavistock.<\/p>\n<p>Bion W.R. (1965). <em>Transformations<\/em>. London: Heinemann.<\/p>\n<p>Ferreira A.J. (1963). Family Myth and Homeostasis. <em>Archives of General Psychiatry<\/em>, 9(5): 457&ndash;463.<\/p>\n<p>Freud S. (1912-1914). Totem e tab&ugrave;. In: <em>OSF<\/em>, vol. 7.<\/p>\n<p>Garc&iacute;a Badaracco J. (2000). <em>Psicoan&aacute;lisis Familiar: los Otros en Nosotros y el Descubrimiento del s&iacute; Mismo<\/em>. Buenos Aires: Paidos.<\/p>\n<p>Granjon E. (2000). Mythopo&iuml;&eacute;se et souffrance familiale. <em>Le divan familial<\/em>, 4: 13&ndash;23.<\/p>\n<p>Lacan J. (1979). The Neurotic&rsquo;s Individual Myth,<em> Psychoanalytic Quarterly<\/em>, <u>48:<\/u>405-425.<\/p>\n<p>L&eacute;vi-Strauss C. (1958). <em>Anthropologie Structurale<\/em>. Paris: Plon.<\/p>\n<p>L&eacute;vi-Strauss C. (1962). <em>La Pens&eacute;e Sauvage<\/em>. Paris: Plon.<\/p>\n<p>Malinowski B. (1926). <em>Myth in Primitive Psychology<\/em>. New York: W.W. Norton.<\/p>\n<p>Meltzer D., Harris M. (1983). <em>Child, Family and Community: A Psychoanalytical Model of the Learning Process<\/em>. Paris: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.<\/p>\n<p>Nicol&ograve; A.M. (1987). La relation th&eacute;rapeutique en th&eacute;rapie familiale. In: A. Ackermans &amp; M. Andolfi (Eds.), <em>La cr&eacute;ation du syst&egrave;meth&eacute;rapeutique<\/em>. Paris: ESF.<\/p>\n<p>Nicol&ograve; A.M. (1988). La famiglia come matrice del pensiero. <em>Terapia Familiare<\/em>, 28: 5&ndash;16.<\/p>\n<p>Nicol&ograve; A.M. (1993). Il transgenerazionale tra mito e segreto. <em>Interazioni<\/em>, 7(1): 138&ndash;52, 1996.<\/p>\n<p>Nicol&ograve; A.M. (1997). L&rsquo;importanza diagnostica delle interazioni nella valutazione della famiglia e delle sue difese transpersonali. <em>Interazioni<\/em>, 10(2): 53&ndash;66.<\/p>\n<p>Nicol&ograve; A.M. (1999). La dimension transg&eacute;n&eacute;rationnelle entre le mythe et le secret. In: B. Prieur (Ed.), <em>Les h&eacute;ritages familiaux<\/em>. Paris: ESF.<\/p>\n<p>Nicol&ograve; A.M. (2014). Family myths and pathological links. In: Nicol&ograve; A.M, Benghozi P., Lucarelli D. (eds), <em>Families in Transformation<\/em>. London: Karnac.<\/p>\n<p>Pulino Fiderio E. (2001). Risposta all&rsquo;Intervista\/Dibattito: C&rsquo;era una volta &hellip; la Famiglia. <em>Interazioni<\/em>, 15(1): 82&ndash;87.<\/p>\n<p>Steiner J. (2004). <em>Psychic Retreats: Pathological Organizations in Psychotic, Neurotic and Borderline Patients<\/em>. London: Routledge.<\/p>\n<hr>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref1\" name=\"_ftn1\" target=\"_blank\">[1]<\/a> This article is an edited version of an article published in the journal <em>Interazioni<\/em>. Reproduced by kind permission of the Journal &ldquo;Interazioni&rdquo;, Franco Angeli Publisher Roma 2014.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/section><\/p><\/div><br>\n\n<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Anna Mar\u00eda NICOL\u00d3<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":2120,"template":"","categories":[],"secciones_revista":[9376],"numero_publicado":[10576],"descriptores":[],"class_list":["post-2127","articulos_revista","type-articulos_revista","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","escritor-nicolo-anna-maria-en","idioma_articulo-english","idioma_articulo-french","idioma_articulo-spanish","secciones_revista-dictionary","numero_publicado-n14-2015-1-en"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/articulos_revista\/2127","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/articulos_revista"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/articulos_revista"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/2120"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2127"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2127"},{"taxonomy":"secciones_revista","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/secciones_revista?post=2127"},{"taxonomy":"numero_publicado","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/numero_publicado?post=2127"},{"taxonomy":"descriptores","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aipcf.net\/revue\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/descriptores?post=2127"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}