Unrepressed Unconscious, Implicit Memory, and Clinical Work analyzes the psychological and neurobiological characteristics of what goes nowadays under the name of “unrepressed
unconscious”, as opposed to Freud’s earlier version of a kind of “repressed unconscious” encountered and described initially in his work with hysterical patients.
Pioneering Italian psychoanalyst and neuroscientist Mauro Mancia has distinguished this seminal Freudian concept from an earlier version of the unconscious (preverbal and pre-symbolic) that he
terms “unrepressed”, and which he describes as “having its foundations in the sensory experiences the infant has with his mother (including hearing her voice, which recalls prosodic experiences
in the womb). In connection with this description of two different kinds of unconscious, a "double" system of memory has been identified: if a traumatic event or series of events takes place
when the nervous system is not ready to encode them linguistically and register them within the declarative memory system, they leave a trace within the implicit memory and particularly within
the right brain, which both Mancia and Schore see as the seat of implicit memory and of that kind of unconscious that is not available for recollection but has not been properly repressed
either (therefore “unrepressed”).