Psychoanalytical and Freudian psychology Books

3780 products


  • Why I Hate You and You Hate Me: The Interplay of Envy, Greed, Jealousy and Narcissism in Everyday Life

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Why I Hate You and You Hate Me: The Interplay of Envy, Greed, Jealousy and Narcissism in Everyday Life

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis'Man' himself is the source of the dark forces against which he is constantly struggling. The book shows how is possible to transcend this basic malice by knowing how, what, why and when it arises. Envy, greed, jealousy and narcissism (the flip side of envy) are the essential components of the negative side of the self. Their positive counterparts are gratitude, generosity and compassion. Each element does not exist in isolation from the other. The interplay of these forces of hate and love create the underlying structure of our lives, which on a personal level is called "character" and on the social level is called "culture". When malice predominates the result is murder and mayhem, vandalism and war. This encompasses the blind butchery of our environment and fellow creatures which permeates so many areas of the world, such as Libya, Ireland, Congo, Cambodia, or central London during recent demonstrations. This study will focus on the negative or angry constituents of the personality. But it will not ignore love. On the contra,ry the author will demonstrate that when people overlook or deny the negative elements in their emotional life (because of guilt or fear), then the positive ones suffer too. As always, love and hate, benevolence and malevolence are inexorably intertwined. The overall purpose of the book is to develop a detailed understanding of mankind's capacity for destruction, as well as for making good.Trade Review'This is a book that engages with hate, but hardly celebrates it. It does give it such humanity and lively concern that we could all own up to a sheepish recognition of these examples and illustrations. The range is wide, from ancient or remote myths through to reports in modern journalism, and from men's "womb envy" to women's "penis greed". The vast showcase of description is vivid, lucid, and immediately true-to-life, so we are left with the message that we are truly like that. The book says in effect that if we take a good look at this cesspit, and, as it were, stare it out, it will find a proper place within us, a place that can be, on the whole, balanced satisfactorily with the more noble, creative, and harmonious humanity with which we are also imbued.'- R. D. Hinshelwood, Professor, Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies, University of Essex'This penetrating book is a scholarly study of malice from a variety of perspectives. Dr Joseph Berke, the famous author of this book, illuminates the fundamental elements of malice - envy, greed, and jealousy - without ignoring love and benevolence, with which they are inexorably intertwined. Although focusing on the dark side of human nature, the book explores the interplay of forces, which on a personal level are called "character" and on a social level, "culture". It is a deep and fascinating work, relevant to us all at all times.'- Ilany Kogan, training analyst, Israel Psychoanalytic Society'Joe Berke has written a powerful tour de force about the vicissitudes of love and hate in human relationships. He brings to this task a wealth of experience with some of the most difficult patients that he has seen over a lifetime of work as a psychotherapist. Despite taking us in to the heart of darkness and the outer reaches of the human soul, his writing, interspersed with his customary humour and wry observation, makes it very accessible and a joy to read. I recommend this book whole heartedly.'- David Morgan, consultant psychotherapist, psychoanalyst (BPAS BPA BAP), training analyst and supervisor'In this book, Joseph Berke does what he does so well: he explicates our everyday feelings, holding them up to his magic psychoanalytic looking glass so that we can see not only the reflection of our feelings, but also where they come from, and how and why they are there. This is all in terms that we can understand and relate to - where "we" includes both mental health professionals and less professional readers. The unsavoury topic of hatred is relevant to us all, and needs contemplation. There could be no more engrossing and helpful way of contemplating it than to read this book.'- Kate Miriam Loewenthal, Emeritus Professor of Psychology, Royal Holloway, University of London'This is a book to be savoured, not only because it is rich with scholarship, insight, and fascinating stories from all walks of human, animal, and physical life, but also because it forces us to look at our dark side and shows us how facing our evil tendencies can liberate us and our relationships. Envy, greed, jealousy, sulking, narcissism, etc. - Berke delineates the causes, dynamics, parameters, interrelationships, effects over time, and how insight and growth can happen.'- Michael Ray, PhD, Banc One-McCoy Professor (emeritus) of Creativity and Innovation, Stanford University, and author of The Highest GoalTable of ContentsIntroduction -- Witches, giants and scary parents -- It’s not fair -- Defile, defame, and devour -- On seeking the source -- On attacking femininity: womb envy -- On attacking masculinity: penis greed -- Envy and narcissism -- Gratitude and grateitude -- On sulking -- The resolution of malice

    1 in stock

    £34.19

  • Coaching in Education: Getting Better Results for

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Coaching in Education: Getting Better Results for

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisCoaching in Education: Getting Better Results for Students, Educators and Parents will support educational organisations in learning more about the current interest in coaching approaches within schools, colleges and universities. With chapters on coaching in primary schools and secondary schools, with students, staff and parents, this book provides a sound basis for introducing coaching into any educational setting. This book brings together the latest national and international academic research with real case studies and a focus on practice that makes a difference for learners. Starting with a review of the existing literature and research into the area of coaching in education, the book goes on to consider the role of coaching educational leaders, coaching within the primary school setting and then secondary school settings.The notion of "mental toughness" and its relationship to coaching is also explored. The US and Australian perspectives on coaching in education are discussed in two chapters written by leading experts - instructional coaching in the US and the integration of positive and coaching psychology in Australia. This is followed by a chapter that focuses on coaching for parents, which is a growing area of interest. Finally, the book concludes with a practical consideration of creating "Coaching Cultures for Learning", proposing a number of models and next steps.Interesting case studies relating to coaching in primary schools, secondary schools and universities are also shared. Written by academics and expert educational practitioners, Coaching in Education is set to become the standard text for anyone interested in studying the subject. Even more importantly, it can be used to support educators who would like to develop coaching cultures for learning for their own students.Trade Review'Recognition of the value of coaching has grown in recent years and it has been applied widely in education, as this important new book demonstrates. Few authors could be better equipped than Christian van Nieuwerburgh to edit a text on coaching and this volume provides a comprehensive and incisive overview of the topic.'- Tony Bush, Professor of Leadership, Institute of Education, University of Warwick, UK 'Coaching in Education is a practical and informative work underpinned by thorough and up-to-date research. The range of topics covered is extensive. Perfect for education coaches and busy education practitioners who wish to establish coaching in their organisations.'- Wendy Hick, Headteacher, Kobi Nazrul Primary School, Tower Hamlets, London, UK 'Coaching in Education provides an excellent overview of the uses of coaching across the spectrum of stakeholders in education, including leaders, teachers, and students. By including scholars and thinkers from the UK, Australia, and the USA, it opens an important conversation across educational contexts. It is well grounded in current theory and research on coaching and yet remains very accessible and readable. This book makes a valuable contribution to both researchers and practitioners of coaching in education.' - Megan Tschannen-Moran, Professor of Educational Leadership, School of Education, College of William & Mary, Virginia, USA'There may be no more important setting for good evidence-based coaching than education. Educational settings are the foundations on which society is built. This excellent book distils best current knowledge and will be a key text for coaches, teachers, students, and parents who seek to enhance the well-being, resilience, and performance of students of all ages, as well as positively impacting on educational institutions themselves. Highly recommended.'- Anthony Grant, Director, Coaching Psychology Unit, University of Sydney, Australia 'A worthy new book demonstrating the great practical use of coaching in educational settings. I particularly enjoyed reading the many exciting and instructive case studies that Christian van Nieuwerburgh has brought together and that underline the general effectiveness of this intervention.'- Erik de Haan, Director of Ashridge Centre for Coaching, Professor of Organisational Development and Coaching, VU University, Amsterdam, Netherlands 'This very readable and engaging collection is a welcome addition to the emerging literature on coaching for teachers and school leaders. There is increasing evidence that coaching is a powerful tool for developing school leadership at all levels, building a school's capacity to improve outcomes for children. Christian's edit includes fresh insights on how to create a coaching culture for learning, both within and beyond the school gates.'- Andrea Berkeley, Education Director, Teaching Leaders, UK

    1 in stock

    £34.19

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Scum

    1 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    1 in stock

    £24.32

  • The World within the Group: Developing Theory for

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The World within the Group: Developing Theory for

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe World within the Group is an original and ambitious endeavour to connect group analysis to philosophy, history, and modern social theory. The book argues that group analysis needs theoretical renewal to remain relevant, and that philosophy is a valuable resource for such thinking. In particular, the work of three philosophers is examined: Nietzsche, Dewey, and Gadamer, each being associated with "pragmatic-perspective" inquiry. The author demonstrates that group analysis is compatible with such inquiry, and that we understand and intervene from within the horizon of specific traditions of training and theory. Group analysis typifies an unremitting relational stance, valuing openness of dialogue, and moving in and out of the perspectival worlds of the participants. The book also offers a re-formulation of the concept of social unconscious, seen as a discursive world of production and articulation. Drawing on contemporary social theories, it chimes with the spirit of Elias's historical approach. Considering social worlds markedly different, often incommensurable, with our own, the author provides accounts of the shifting social unconsciousness during the Reformation and revolutionary upheavals in England. The social unconscious generates ideals and exclusions, both model and abject figures, such as those of the witch, the model Christian, degenerates and other "dangerous classes". Returning to clinical concerns, the final two essays address the "narrative turn" in social sciences. The implications of considering persons as story-telling, metaphorical animals is explored, as is the inevitability that personal stories are infused by wider, cultural narratives. Society has changed considerably since Foulkes' day and the final chapter considers how group analysis can help contain as well as illuminate some of the complex issues we face in the modern world, and thus remain relevant.Trade Review'Martin Weegmann is an experienced clinician whose sensitivity and compassion for his patients is elegantly evident in his writing. He writes clearly yet evocatively, giving the reader a clear appreciation of his patients' humanity, strengths, and vulnerabilities.'- Dr Edward Khantzian, Clinical Professor in Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School'A breathtaking theoretical sweep, offering new directions, not only for group analysis and therapeutic interventions, but also for anyone who wants to address the sociopolitical in and of the psychological.'- Erica Burman, Professor of Education, University of Manchester'A beautifully crafted, theoretically sophisticated book tracing both cultural and more personal elements of psychopathology. This volume expands our overall knowledge of the relationships we and our patients find helpful and problematic.'- Walter Stone, MD, Professor Emeritus, University of Cincinnati; Distinguished Fellow of the American Group Psychotherapy Association'Martin Weegmann weaves together an extremely rich tapestry using threads of philosophy, history, and social theory. No one interested in horizons of group analytic theory and practice today can afford to ignore this "interdisciplinary, integrative book that moves between different domains of enquiry".'- Dieter Nitzgen, MA, group analyst, Germany'This book offers a profound appreciation of the group psychotherapeutic space and the rich and diverse cultural narratives that propel processes of internalisation and identification. Martin Weegmann is a writer who possesses a rare gift for clarity in exposition and imaginative lucidity. This fascinating book breaks new ground through the author's rich weave of intersubjectivity, clinical insight, and the narrative scores that orchestrate our daily lives and interpersonal relationships.'- Alistair D. Sweet, Senior Psychotherapist, Addiction NI and Honorary Lecturer, Queen's University, Belfast'The World within the Group looks out across new horizons to situate a philosophical account of group psychotherapy that is well fitted to the clinical challenges of today. Some surprising and refreshing observations are brought alive with narratives that speak with great sensitivity and humanity. Martin Weegmann has the knack of making dense theory accessible without muffling the voices of those with whom he has worked.'- Dr Gary Winship, Associate Professor, Senior Fellow, Institute for Mental Health, University of NottinghamTable of ContentsNew International Library of Group Analysis Foreword , Preface , Introduction , Working intersubjectively: theory and therapy , Personal horizons, unformulated experience, and group analysis , Perspectivism, pragmatism, group analysis , The articulated space of social unconsciousness , Reforming subjectivity: personal, familial, and group implications of English reformation , An exclusionary matrix: degenerates, addicts, homosexuals , A modern monster? The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde , “And thereby hangs a tale”: narrative dimensions of human life , Group analysis in contemporary society , Postscript , Glossary

    1 in stock

    £34.19

  • The Weary Sons of Freud

    Verso Books The Weary Sons of Freud

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Weary Sons of Freud lambasts mainstream psychoanalysis for its failure to grapple with pressing political and social matters pertinent to its patients' condition. Gifted with insight and compelled by fury, Catherine Clément contrasts the original, inspirational psychoanalytical work of Freud and Lacan to the obsessive imitations of their uninspired followers-the weary sons of Freud.The analyst's once attentive ear has become deaf to the broader questions of therapeutic practice. Clement asks whether the perspective of socialism, brought to this study by a woman who is herself an analysand, can fill the gap. She reflects on her own history, as well as on that of psychoanalysis and the French left, to show what an activist and feminist restoration of the talking cure might look like.Trade ReviewA work of ferocious humour and loving spite. What, she asks herself (and us) loud and direct, are psychoanalysts for? * La Nouvel Observateur *Brilliantly written ... to be read in one sitting. * Le Monde *

    10 in stock

    £12.34

  • Psychotherapy 2.0: Where Psychotherapy and

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Psychotherapy 2.0: Where Psychotherapy and

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe digital age is both exciting and challenging for psychotherapy, opening the door to clients groups previously not able to access psychological help, whilst also providing the challenges caused by social media and internet abuse and how these impact on the consulting room. Psychotherapy 2.0 blows open the consulting room doors and shows successful pathways for attracting new clients to gain access to psychological help, as well as demonstrating that despite initial scepticism, working online as a psychotherapist or counsellor can be as effective as 'face2face' work: the therapeutic relationship may be different but it remains the centrally important feature for successful psychotherapy. It follows therefore that all psychotherapists and counsellors need to be fully informed about the impact of the digital age on their clinical practice. Psychotherapy 2.0 covers the key issues for psychotherapists and counsellors who are, or are thinking of, working online, include thinking about psychotherapy in the digital age, the requirements to modify training both for working online and also the digital issues as they arise within the face2face consulting room.This book is intended as a first volume in this fast changing field, with further volumes intended to concentrate on existing and emerging research, as well the diverse ways in which online work is already being developed and implemented worldwide. It is possibly the greatest moment of change for psychotherapy since Freud: there is no going back, and just as we cannot put toothpaste back in the tube, psychotherapy practice is changed for ever with the advent of the digital age.Trade ReviewVolume One'This book explores the implications of the digital world for talking therapies. It covers both the theoretical and the practical, from the way the internet might challenge and change current practice, to thinking about the legalities and training required to set up as an online practitioner.
The book also covers the exciting new ways in which digital technology is extending our concept of therapy to include new communities, new ways of working, and delivering support. It's written with a broad audience in mind, so whether you're just starting to learn about digital technologies, or are a fully immersed "digital native", this book will have something for you.'- Jen Hyatt, CEO, Big White Wall Ltd'We might expect that psychotherapists and counsellors would be naturally keen on exploring therapeutic encounters in the digital age. After all, are we not explorers, used to walking alongside our clients, intrigued by the topography, flora, and fauna of their idiosyncratic lives? And are we not those who can hear that which cannot (dare not) be spoken - and risking speaking the unspeakable? And are we not at ease with fantasy and phantasy, the reality behind the "real"? Yet the digital world has caught us out - left us behind. Topography has changed; the language is new; fantasy, phantasy, and reality are not what they were. Can it be that the therapists are the ones lost and confused? New possibilities exist for psychotherapy and counselling to provide therapy, training, and supervision, at the unfolding edge of human consciousness. This book will stimulate many, terrify some - and open the minds of all therapists to the opportunities - and dangers - of therapy in the globalised, digitalised world. Love it or loathe it - we are all affected by it already. So let's join the dance.'- Adrian M. Rhodes, Vice-President, European Association for PsychotherapyTable of ContentsUKCP Book Editorial Board Preface , Preface , Foreword , Psychotherapy Evolution In Context , Psychotherapy 2.0: for better or for worse? , How to think about psychotherapy in a digital context , Thinking about training fit for the digital era , Therapy In Practice , The therapeutic alliance online , Challenges and dilemmas in the online consulting room , Lost in translation—meeting the challenges of language and regional customs when working online, cross-border, without visual cues , Avatars—opening the virtual doors of therapy , Establishing an online practice , Working Safely and Legally in the Context of International Law , Developing ethical delivery of cross-border services , Protecting children and young people—the “online” generation , The Way forward

    1 in stock

    £31.99

  • Hamlet in Analysis: Horatio's Story-A Trial of

    2 in stock

    £23.74

  • Teaching Bion: Modes and Approaches

    Karnac Books Teaching Bion: Modes and Approaches

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £22.79

  • The Analytic Field and its Transformations

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Analytic Field and its Transformations

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Analytic Field and its Transformations presents a collection of articles, written jointly by Antonino Ferro and Giuseppe Civitarese in recent years, all revolving around the post-Bionian model of the analytic field - Bionian Field Theory (BFT). Going hand-in-hand with the ever-growing interest in Bion in general, analytic field theory is emerging as a new paradigm in psychoanalysis. Bion mounted a systematic deconstruction of the principles of classical psychoanalysis. His aim, however, was not to destroy it, but rather to bring out its untapped potential and to develop ideas that have remained on its margins.BFT is a field of inquiry that refuses a priori, at least from its own specific perspective, to immobilize the facts of the analysis within a rigid historical or intrapsychic framework. Its intention is rather to bring out the historicity of the present, the way in which the relationship is formed instant-by-instant from a subtle interplay of identity and differentiation, proximity and distance, embracing both Bion's rigorous, and his radical, spirit. The truth of the analysis is no longer something one arrives at, it cannot be fixed or possessed; it lies rather in the experience; it is the experience. The answer lies in the question - or, rather, asking the question is the feature of this model that most closely corresponds to the idea that what feeds and grows the mind is the weaving of a sustainable meaning, or dreaming reality, just as in the nurturing relationship between mother and child.Trade Review'In this compelling new volume, Antonino Ferro and Giuseppe Civitarese present the cutting edge of contemporary psychoanalytic field theory. In so doing, they do an extraordinary job of integrating the ideas of many thinkers from diverse corners of the intellectual universe into a radically new, but clinically useful way of thinking about the patient-analyst discourse. It is one of the most impressive psychoanalytic contributions I have read in the last two decades and has the potential to transform the day-in, day-out work of the analyst into new depths of understanding. The journey into the unconscious will never be the same. I highly recommend it to all analysts and psychoanalytic therapists.'- Glen O. Gabbard, MD, author of Love and Hate in the Analytic Setting'Psychoanalysis has currently become enriched by renewed conceptions of long-developing models, such as drive, part object, ego psychology, social psychology, relationism, and intersubjectivity, to name just a few, but now comes along yet another new and exciting joining together of many of these models with one borrowed from the field of grammatology, specifically metaphor - and field theory, a distillation of Kleinian and relation-intersubjectivity, and other earlier works by Bion, especially his contributions on groups and container/contained. The authors epigrammatise this new trend as "BFT", ("post-Bion Field Theory"). There are many noteworthy features in this work. It presents itself as a compendium and resource book that spells out the fundamental structure of this new analytic super-model by an extensive deconstruction of other psychoanalytic models, followed by thoughtful integrations of them with the field theory model. I found the painstaking distinctions the authors make between "interpersonal", "intersubjective", "group", and "field" to be valuable. I was also happy to see how they spelled out the mystery of "field operations" - as the anonymous voice of the group totally as well as individually, the collective will (author) being the product of the subgroups and their members. The analyst now has a voice with which he can be effectively spoken as well as speak. This work promises to become a standard.'- James S. Grotstein, MD, Professor of Psychiatry, UCLA School of Medicine, and author of A Beam of Intense Darkness: Wilfred Bion's Legacy to PsychoanalysisTable of ContentsACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ABOUT THE AUTHORS PREFACE CHAPTER ONE The meaning and use of metaphor in analytic field theory CHAPTER TWO Stone got eyes: on Bion's seminar in Paris CHAPTER THREE Mourning and the empty couch: a conversation between analysts CHAPTER FOUR The secret of faces CHAPTER FIVE Spacings CHAPTER SIX Analysts in search of an author: Voltaire or Artemisia Gentileschi? CHAPTER SEVEN Confrontation in the Bionian model of the analytic field CHAPTER EIGHT A Beam of Intense Darkness: a discussion of the book by James Grotstein CHAPTER NINE Between 'other' and 'other': Merleau-Ponty as a precursor of the analytic field CHAPTER TEN Carla's panic attacks: insight and transformation REFERENCESINDEX

    1 in stock

    £31.99

  • Emotions and the Therapist: A Systemic-Dialogical

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Emotions and the Therapist: A Systemic-Dialogical

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn recent years, systemic theory and practice adopted a dialogical orientation, centred on the persons of the therapist and client. This has led to a growing attention toward emotions, which, in this book, is developed in terms of emotional systems. An emotional system in therapy may be viewed as the sum of the emotions existing and interacting in people's lives. Relevant changes in life happen when emotional stances and sequences change within the system, leading, for example, to a greater sense of agency or hope, or to a different perception of the situation.This book looks at emotions within human systems in terms of dominant and silent emotions, which shape and are shaped by human relationships, and may be played in several ways according to reciprocal emotional positioning. The therapist uses his or her own feeling, and understanding of the emotions within the therapeutic dialogue, in order to create hypotheses and new dialogues which allow change, ?rst of all, in the emotional tone and positioning of clients.The book deals with key therapeutic questions related to emotions: how can the therapist see clients in terms of emotional systems? How can the therapist develop a better understanding of his or her own emotional preferred positions? And how can he or she use such increased awareness of emotional facts to become more sensitive to clients' needs and wishes, in order to implement more ef?cient and comprehensive interventions?Trade Review'What a long way systemic thinking has travelled from the days in which the topics of emotions and the intimate involvement of the therapist in the process of therapy were largely "off the agenda". It is a pleasure to read the latest development of Paolo Bertrando's thinking and practice focusing on emotions and the therapeutic relationship. Set within a contemporary systemic frame that blends dialogical understandings, the discussion begins from the premise that emotions always come from somewhere and always go somewhere, and that they emerge within relationships while simultaneously being experienced at an intimate and individual level. This book offers original and creative orientations to emotions within family relationships and to the emotions of the therapist, as well as ways of thinking about (and working with) patterns that emerge between family members and within the therapeutic relationship. Bertrando's work is a feast of ideas about theory and practice, and his extended discussions of his own practice experience are fascinating and inspiring.'- Carmel Flaskas, Honorary Asssociate Professor, School of Social Sciences, UNSW, Australia'After the "linguistic turn", now it is time for the "affective turn" in the field of marital and family therapy. It seems that language, narratives and stories are no longer the central focus of family therapists' discussions and reflections - emotions are. This book provides a refreshingly different approach to emotions than we are used to. Emotions are not viewed as deep-rooted, biological, inner experiences. They are systemic and dialogical: they are shared and exist between people. Bertrando uses this perspective on emotions as a lens to look at the complexity of his practice as a systemic therapist. It is a rich, fascinating and original book, placing not only emotions, but also the therapist (with his/her emotions) centre stage. Scholarly as well as accessible, it will appeal to both the academic and the practitioner.'- Peter Rober, PhD, family therapist and trainer at Context (UPC KU Leuven, Belgium) and full professor at Leuven University, BelgiumTable of ContentsSeries Editors' Foreword , Foreword , Introduction , Systems and emotions , Emotional systems , The interplay of emotions , The therapist , Emotional systems in therapy , Emotions and dialogues , Direct talk , Moments of truth , Definitions , Perspectives on emotions

    1 in stock

    £35.14

  • Defining Psychoanalysis: Achieving a Vernacular

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Defining Psychoanalysis: Achieving a Vernacular

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe empirical baseline of today's psychoanalytic vernacular may be inferred from what psychoanalysts read. Contemporary information aggregation provides us with a unique moment in "reading" today's psychoanalytic vernacular. The PEP Archive compiles data on journal articles analogous to radio stations' "hit parades" of contemporary favorites. Defining Psychoanalysis: Achieving a Vernacular Expression provides a close reading of this contemporary assemblage, including three "strong" readings by Winnicott and two by Bion. It pursues the elements generated by these papers as an indication of contemporary psychoanalytic "common sense", our consensual building blocks of theory and practice.Trade Review'In this innovative, intelligent and explorative book, Ian Miller solves a mystery I have been haunted by for years: how analysts in the twenty first century use texts that were written decades ago. The book provides a masterful theory - a deep understanding of the "vernacular psychoanalytic", a term I believe should be used widely whenever one wants to understand how analysts use and practise their theories.'- Aner Govrin, author of Conservative and Radical Perspectives on Psychoanalytic Knowledge: The Fascinated and the Disenchanted'Ian Miller makes the case that every generation, by re-reading and re-understanding the work of writers who have come before, constructs its own "vernacular psychoanalysis". Our contemporary reading, Miller tells us, is a retranscription that represents a discovery of new (and newly relevant) meanings in old sources, just as we discover new significances in our own pasts over the course of life, and in treatment. He illustrates his argument by considering five of the ten articles - three by Winnicott, two by Bion - that were most widely read on PEP in the year 2014-2015. It is impossible for me to say which is more interesting: the innovative way Miller has constructed his argument, or the deep and thoughtful argument itself.'- Donnel Stern, author of Unformulated Experience: From Dissociation to Imagination in Psychoanalysis and Partners in Thought: Working With Unformulated Experience, Dissociation, and Enactment'Defining Psychoanalysis is a good starting place for discerning the clinical landscape shared among psychoanalytic practitioners of all varieties in our contemporary world. This voyage of discovery for a vernacular language for psychoanalysis produces a valuable map, indicating five major landmark texts between its origins and the Babel of today.'- Toni O'Brien Johnson, Irish Forum for Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, from the ForewordTable of ContentsForeword , Expressing vernacular psychoanalysis , Winnicott's 1949 expression, Hate in the Countertransference , Winnicott's 1953 expression, Transitional Objects and Transitional Phenomena , Winnicott's 1960 expression, The Theory of the Parent—Infant Relationship , Bion's 1962 expression, The Psycho-Analytical Study of Thinking , Thinking with Bion on thinking , Bion's 1959 expression,Attacks on Linking , Discovering one's own vernacular , Appendix

    1 in stock

    £24.32

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Feeling Brain: Selected Papers on

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisNeuropsychoanalysis is the fastest growing area within psychoanalysis, providing a bridge between "classic" psychoanalysis and the neurological sciences. This book provides an accessible introduction to the field through a selection of papers by one of its leading figures. It includes papers on the theoretical and philosophical foundations of neuropsychoanalysis, scientific papers on the brain mechanisms of dreaming and consciousness, the application of neuropsychoanalysis in psychiatry and neurology, and clinical case studies.Table of ContentsForeword -- Introduction -- What is a Neuropsychoanalytic Perspective? -- What is neuropsychoanalysis? -- Putting the psyche into neuropsychology -- What is the “mind”? A neuropsychoanalytic approach -- Neuropsychoanalytic Perspectives on Some Neurological Disorders -- Is the brain more real than the mind? -- An example of neuropsychoanalytic research: Korsakoff’s syndrome -- Neuropsychoanalytic Perspectives on Some Psychiatric Disorders -- Depression: a neuropsychoanalytic perspective -- Neuropsychoanalytic notes on addiction -- Neuropsychoanalytic Perspectives on Dreams -- Freudian dream theory today -- The Interpretation of Dreams and the neurosciences -- Neuropsychoanalytic Perspectives on Consciousness -- The “id” knows more than the “ego” admits -- A neuropsychoanalytic approach to the hard problem of consciousness -- Conclusions

    15 in stock

    £34.99

  • The Clinical Paradigms of Melanie Klein and

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Clinical Paradigms of Melanie Klein and

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe main aims of this book are to introduce the distinctive clinical paradigms of Melanie Klein and Donald Winnicott, to compare and contrast the way in which their theories evolved, and to present a dialogue between Hinshelwood and Abram on the concepts of their respective chapters. The book is presented in five parts, each with two chapters by Hinshelwood and Abram on five chosen topics: Basic Principles, Early psychic development, The role of the external object, The psychoanalytical concept of psychic pain, and Practice and Theory. After the pair of chapters in each part, a summary of the main points is presented followed by a dialogue between Abram and Hinshelwood about each other's chapter. The readership intended is both those coming new to psychoanalytic ideas, who will gain an introduction to both these schools of British Object Relations psychoanalysis, and also those experienced psychoanalysts who wish to develop an understanding of how the conceptualisations of these two schools might be compared and contrasted.Trade Review"This is an important and innovative book for all modern psychoanalysts; lucidly written, it compares and contrasts the work of Melanie Klein and Donald Winnicott with a lively dialogue between Abram and Hinshelwood. This throws new light on the work of both these major psychoanalytical figures, deepening our understanding of them and the interaction between them. The authors highlight the very contrasting ways in which Klein and Winnicott developed theoretically moving on from Freud in studying early development. This was despite Klein’s great influence on Winnicott. A future classic I found it hard to put down."-Nick Temple, Training Analyst and former President of the British Psychoanalytical Society; Former CEO, Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust"This book is really exceptional due to the highly original formula of a dialogue between two renowned scholars on Klein and Winnicott. Each voice speaks out of conviction and identity with their respective author and there is something very truthful in the exchange, due to the personal and direct style of the dialogue that retains a scientific approach. Following each dialogue the reader is captured time and again and challenged to reconsider previous understandings. The published discussions have much the same effect as the direct dialogue had during the Warsaw conference, when people were most impressed to see that it was possible to have a true scientific and clinical exchange on such radically different psychoanalytic schools of thought. The book will certainly contribute to the culture of ‘hot’ psychoanalytic discussions."-Anna Czownicka, Ph.D., Training Analyst and former President of the Polish Psychoanalytical Society Table of ContentsPreface Notes on Authors Biographical Notes and ChronologiesMelanie Klein (1882 – 1960)Donald Winnicott (1896 – 1971) INTRODUCTION PART ONE – BASIC PRINCIPLES Chapter One – Melanie Klein – Bob Hinshelwood Chapter Two – Donald Winnicott – Jan Abram SUMMARYDIALOGUEPART TWO – EARLY PSYCHIC DEVELOPMENT Chapter Three – The Kleinian baby – Bob Hinshelwood Chapter Four – The Winnicottian babies – Jan Abram SUMMARYDIALOGUEPART THREE – THE ROLE OF THE EXTERNAL OBJECT Chapter Five – Anxiety and phantasy – Bob Hinshelwood Chapter Six – The environment-individual set up – Jan Abram SUMMARYDIALOGUEPART FOUR – THE PSYCHOANALYTIC CONCEPT OF PSYCHIC PAIN Chapter Seven – Melanie Klein and internal anxiety – Bob Hinshelwood Chapter Eight – Donald Winnicott’s view of aggression – Jan Abram SUMMARYDIALOGUEPART FIVE – PRACTICE AND THEORY Chapter Nine – Whose Reality? Whose Experience? - Bob Hinshelwood Chapter Ten – Holding and the Mutative Interpretation - Jan Abram SUMMARYDIALOGUEAPPENDIX – Myths and misperceptions GLOSSARY FURTHER READING AFTERWORDReferences

    1 in stock

    £33.24

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Making Room for Madness in Mental Health: The

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn this book, Marcus Evans argues that in addition to providing a helpful treatment for patients who suffer from serious psychological difficulties, psychoanalytic thinking can also help mental health staff develop a better understanding of their patients and complement other ways of thinking about mental disturbance. Mental health professionals need to be receptive to their patients' projections and communications, but these powerful projections can become overwhelming, especially for clinicians who are in direct contact with their patients for long periods of time. A psychoanalytic model which puts the understanding of the relationship between the clinician and patient at the centre of its preoccupations can also give mental health professionals a language for describing their experiences of, and interactions with, their patients. This model is developmental and provides a dynamic picture of the ways in which different parts of the patient's self wrestle for control of the patient's mind over time. Evans argues that this framework for understanding can help in the day-to-day management of these changes and fluctuations. Evans believes that the diagnosis and active interventions employed by psychiatry need to be accompanied by a receptive approach to treatment and care. Mental health professionals need to be interested in the meaning of their patient's symptoms and verbal and physical communications. These may convey important information about the patient's internal world and underlying conflicts. This receptive approach requires mental health professionals to make a switch from the active state of mind demanded by active interventions, to the receptive state of mind required by the need to take in the patient's emotional state and underlying personality structure. Making Room for Madness in Mental Health draws on the author's extensive experience of working psychoanalytically with people with severe and enduring mental illness, as well as providing psychoanalytic supervision and consultation in a range of mental health settings to show how psychoanalytic ways of thinking may complement other approaches to mental disturbance by highlighting the communication and meaning of such disturbance. This is illuminated by lively clinical vignettes, supported by accessible accounts of key psychoanalytic theory. Working with people with mental illness can be rewarding and enlightening. It can also be disturbing, frightening, boring, frustrating, anxiety provoking and stupefying. Evans argues that we need to provide room and space for mental health professionals to reflect upon and think about their experiences on a day-to-day basis, and to train clinicians to senior levels in order that they can offer clinical supervision to front-line staff, which can help them develop ideas about the meaning of their patients' symptoms and behaviours. Psychoanalysis offers a model for thinking about and providing meaning for, the anxieties that drive us 'out of our minds', and this can reduce the risk of thoughtless action. To some extent this involves putting the madness back into mental health.Trade Review'This book will help all health professionals who want to learn how to listen to their patients and try to understand what it feels like to be mentally ill. It can enable us all to tolerate the distress of psychiatric disorder and to make a place for it in our hospitals and clinics as well as in our minds.'- John Steiner, training and supervising analyst of the British Psychoanalytical Society and author of Psychic Retreats and Seeing and Being Seen'Marcus Evans has written a most important book that will be of great value to all who work with severe mental illness in front-line mental health teams. Through his use of many detailed clinical examples, he demonstrates the value to staff of time for reflection with an experienced psychoanalytically trained practitioner in developing a greater understanding of their patients and their effects on the individual, team and management structures. I anticipate this book will be recommended reading for decades to come for nurses, psychologists and psychiatrists as well as psychotherapists of all modalities.'- Dr Brian Martindale, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst of the British Psychoanalytical Society; formerly chair of the International Society for the Psychological Treatments of the Schizophrenias and other Psychoses'This is a book of great value for all concerned, in whatever way, with the treatment of severely mentally ill patients. We see the problems and sufferings of the patients, their strange and disturbing engagements with staff, and the resulting problems and need for support of the staff. But the paramount fact, as Marcus Evans shows, is the way that the psychoanalytic method does not keep insanity out of view, but tries to offer madness a habitat and human understanding.'- Edna O'Shaughnessy, distinguished fellow and training and supervising analyst of the British Psychoanalytical Society'Marcus Evans has produced a very valuable addition to the literature on applied psychoanalysis. For me its principle value is the clarity with which he explains how a psychoanalytic approach to psychopathology can illuminate both difficult to treat psychiatric patients, and also the social dynamics of the clinical team in interaction with the complex patient. Marcus Evans, like many of us, is deeply troubled by the current trend within mental health towards over-simplification and cost-cutting that fails to cut costs in the longer term. One of the negative consequences of this is loss of the expertise needed to support more junior staff in coping with the huge emotional as well as intellectual demands that some complex psychiatric patients make on them. I strongly recommend this book to anyone interested in how psychoanalytic theories can be effectively put into practice in the course of delivering mainstream psychiatric care.'- Dr David Somekh, Network Director, European Health Futures Forum, forensic psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, British Psychoanalytical Society'The relationship between phenomenological and dynamic approaches to understanding mental health and illness has shaped the last century of British psychiatry. Although often a thorny relationship, Marcus Evans in this book highlights just how important the relationship remains if we are to understand and work with real humanity. Psychiatry needs dynamic understanding just as psychoanalysis needs psychiatry. This text should be essential reading therefore for anyone interested in deepening their practice.'- Dr Matthew Patrick, Chief Executive of the South London and Maudsley NHS FT, psychiatrist and a training and supervising analyst with the British Psychoanalytical SocietyTable of ContentsSeries Editors' Preface -- Preface -- Foreword -- Introduction -- Theory in practice -- Psychoanalytic supervision in mental health settings -- Being driven mad: towards understanding borderline states -- Pinned against the ropes: psychoanalytic understanding of patients with antisocial personality disorder -- Tuning in to the psychotic wavelength -- The role of psychoanalytic assessment in the management and care of a psychotic patient -- Deliberate self-harm: "I don't have a problem dying, it's living I can't stand" -- Anorexia: the silent assassin within -- Hysteria: the erotic solution to psychological problems -- Conclusion

    15 in stock

    £34.19

  • Short-term Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy for

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Short-term Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy for

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisShort-term Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy (STPP) is a manualised, time-limited model of psychoanalytic psychotherapy comprising twenty-eight weekly sessions for the adolescent patient and seven sessions for parents or carers, designed so that it can be delivered within a public mental health system, such as Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services in the UK. It has its origins in psychoanalytic theoretical principles, clinical experience, and empirical research suggesting that psychoanalytic treatment of this duration can be effective for a range of disorders, including depression, in children and young people. The manual explicitly focuses on the treatment of moderate to severe depression, both by detailing the psychoanalytic understanding of depression in young people and through careful consideration of clinical work with this group. It is the first treatment manual to describe psychoanalytic psychotherapy for adolescents with depression. The treatment approach described in this manual has been used in a multi-site randomised controlled trial in the UK, 'Improving Mood with Psychoanalytic and Cognitive Therapies' (IMPACT) and internationally. It is presented here as a treatment to be used in routine clinical practice and will be of interest to child psychotherapists, multi-disciplinary professionals in young people's mental health, service providers, and researchers alike.After describing theoretical models of depression and presenting an overview of STPP as a treatment model, the manual details the specific stages of the STPP process for the therapist and adolescent patient. It then describes the nature and scope of parallel work with parents and gives a detailed account of the function of supervision.Trade Review'This manual is extraordinary. It manages to tackle eloquently the controversy over the danger of reductionist narrowing of the art of psychoanalysis versus the free, abundant, and creative intuiting of the nuances of transference and countertransference. Thus it is more than a manual - it is an important contribution to what Schore calls the "science of the art" of psychotherapy. Importantly, it begins by distinguishing depression in adolescence from that in childhood and in adulthood. The authors insist that psychoanalytic work with severely depressed adolescents must take account not only of the pathology, but also of the developmental tasks of adolescence - those concerned with finding a balance between developing an adult identity and maintaining appreciation of parental figures. We are left in no doubt of the necessity for finely detailed calibration of the differing and changing states of mind of both patient and his or her family, the skill required to carry this out, the urgency for such treatment to prevent the well-known relapses, and of course the research required to validate its effectiveness. For all the detail, it is also highly readable.'-Dr Anne Alvarez, PhD, MACP, Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychotherapist'This research-informed and comprehensive treatment manual covers not only the principles, aims, and techniques of STPP, but also theories of adolescent depression and developmental perspectives, the empirical evidence for psychoanalytic therapy, and a thorough description of the stages of treatment. This treatment is designed for young persons with clinical depression, including the severely depressed with long-standing complex relational difficulties. Reading the manual, I was struck by the tone of compassion and hopefulness also for "hopeless patients" that have lost almost all faith in the adult world. How therapists can use their own feelings as a source for better understanding their patients is masterfully described. I endorse this book with the highest level of enthusiasm.'- Per Hoglend, Professor of Psychiatry, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo'This book is a very welcome and timely addition to the canon of psychoanalytic practice. The structured articulation of the psychoanalytic approach, which madethis approach amenable to testing in a modern state-of-the-art randomised controlled trial (RCT), is timely and necessary. This treatment manual manages to combine theory with compassionate and practical everyday NHS clinical practice. It carries the psychoanalytic tradition forwards, and I wholeheartedly commend it to trainees and experienced practitioners alike.'- Dr Raphael Kelvin, Consultant and Associate Lecturer in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Cambridge University, and National Clinical Lead for MindEdTable of ContentsSeries Editors’ Preface , Foreword , Introduction , Psychoanalytic views of adolescent depression , Psychoanalytic child psychotherapy: principles and evidence , Short-Term Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy for adolescent depression: framework and process , The stages of treatment in Short-Term Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy , Work with parents and carers , Supervision of Short-Term Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy , Short-Term Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy in clinical practice , Afterword , About the Association of Child Psychotherapists

    1 in stock

    £37.04

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Breathing as a Tool for Self-Regulation and

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe book describes how to use breathing as a medium for self-regulation and self-reflection and how balanced breathing thus helps to promote mental and physical health and alleviate symptoms resulting from imbalanced breathing. The authors describe applications of psychophysical breathing therapy in many areas of life, developed by both themselves and other professionals trained by them.The approach of the book is based on the interactional aspects between mind and body. A person's breathing style influences their relation both to themselves and to others - and vice versa, and thus mental and also physical health. A comprehensive theoretical description of the psychophysical regulation of breathing and the consequences of imbalanced breathing is complemented by material derived from the authors' extensive clinical experience. Psychological orientations used by the writers include object relations theories, and psychodynamic, cognitive, brief and group therapy theories. As a new aspect the writers introduce how breathing patterns are learnt in early interaction. The writers also acknowledge how physical factors affect and interact with psychological factors in producing imbalanced breathing.Psychophysical breathing exercises seek to restore natural breathing appropriate to the physical needs of the body. People are helped to observe and assess sensations, emotions, and thoughts in connection with changes in breathing, thus learning in a very concrete way how mind and body interact. A key aim of the exercises is to increase the awareness of how breathing reacts in interpersonal interaction. That is why the writers prefer group therapy. A prerequisite to learning new ways of breathing is that the person feels she and her breathing are accepted as they are. Learning to calm down is another key aspect in the therapy. Instead of anatomical concepts mental images are used.Trade Review'We live in an era of increasing human population, hence of globalisation and climate change. The individual faces increasing uncertainties and changes in living conditions. Therefore, options for self-regulation are welcome. This book describes the possibilities and effects of an approach to psychophysical integration, using breathing, developed over forty years. Psychophysical integration means that we inhabit a living body but also live in our mentally constructed reality. The two realities tend to split, but when they integrate we become more resilient, realistic and adaptive beings. Breathing is a proper tool to this end: it is not only a vital biological function; it is also part of posture and movement, and also instrumental in our self-awareness. We receive feedback on ourselves from it, but may also partially regulate our breathing. Readers will benefit from the insights offered in this book.'--Jan van Dixhoorn, Director of the Centre for Breathing Therapy, Netherlands, and associate editor of the International Journal of Stress ManagementTable of ContentsDisclaimer , Introduction , Psychophysical breathing therapy , Psychophysical regulation of breathing , Imbalanced breathing in connection with health problems , Breathing in interpersonal encounter , Mental breathing , Applications of psychophysical breathing therapy , Breathing exercises

    15 in stock

    £32.99

  • Echoism: The Silent Response to Narcissism

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Echoism: The Silent Response to Narcissism

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book introduces the importance of Echoism as both a clinical entity and a theoretical concept. In Ovid's version of the myth of Echo and Narcissus, the character Echo receives equal attention to her counterpart, Narcissus, yet she has been completely marginalised in the pervasive psychoanalytic literatures on narcissism.In the myth, Echo is subjected to a curse: she must remain silent except for her right to repeat the words of another; so in order to have a voice she must seek out an 'other'. Relying upon Narcissus for her very existence she has, ironically, in the psychoanalytical literature, also become both the literal and symbolic embodiment of the marginalised female voice. This book introduces her as a subject in her own right, countering her current status as the co-dependent object of the narcissist, in an attempt to restore her existence and have her voice heard.The author draws upon her work with patients who have experienced relationships with narcissistic partners or parents, and have developed a particular configuration of object relations and ways of relating to which she gives the term Echoism. She uses psychoanalytic theory and existential philosophical ideas to underpin her formulations and inform her clinical thinking.Trade Review‘This book refocuses the Narcissus myth in a compelling way that illuminates and extends our views of narcissism as a personality trait and as a clinical disorder. Donna Christina Savery brings to Ovid’s story a theatrical director's eye and a psychologically informed imagination that draws on existential and psychoanalytic writings to explore the complementary female partnership of male narcissism. It splendidly combines literary intuition and a clinical sense of personal development and inter-personal relationships. For anyone with a professional interest in psychodynamic marital work and couple relationships her concept of ‘Echoism’ is invaluable; for anyone who finds life interesting and art illuminating it is fascinating and stimulating; for those with a psychotherapeutic, clinical, practice it is eye opening.’-Dr. Ronald Britton, Fellow Royal Society of Psychiatrists and Distinguished Fellow British Psychoanalytic Society‘The idea of Echoism, with its potential to tell the other side of such a powerful story (and human dynamic) seems at first so blatantly obvious that I am incredulous that it has been so neglected. This book illuminates a truth about human relationships (therapeutic and otherwise) that has, until now, been hidden in plain sight. Practitioners of all theoretical persuasions should be encouraged to engage with Echo, and all that she has to tell us about ourselves, our clients and our society.’-Dr Susan Iacovou, Chartered Counselling Psychologist and author of Existential Therapy: 100 Key Points‘In her original re-visitation of the Greek myth of Narcissus, psychotherapist Donna Christina Savery offers us here a convincing shift of emphasis to the ‘other’ dramatis persona, the nymph Echo. Left by most conventional readings, psychoanalytic ones included, in the shadow of the beautiful man she is in love with, Echo finds here her due voice, supported by literary and existential-philosophical considerations, in analytic theory and in its therapeutic applications. Described in detail by Savery, and illustrated by relevant clinical vignettes, the phenomenology of the resulting condition of ‘Echoism’, whose prominent feature is ‘an absence of a self… most apparent in the absence of a voice’, deserves our serious consideration.’-Andrea Sabbadini, Fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society, Director of the European Psychoanalytic Film Festival; author of Moving Images (2014) and Boundaries and Bridges (2014)Table of ContentsList of clinical vignettesAcknowledgementsAbout the authorForeword by Alice Holzey-KunzIntroductionPart I: Important theories in understanding echoismCHAPTER ONE: The myth of Echo and Narcissus: deconstructing dominant readingsCHAPTER TWO: Adam’s rib: a psychoanalytic approach to understanding echoismCHAPTER THREE: To be or not to be: an existential approach to understanding echoismPart II: Types of echoism CHAPTER FOUR: Chimeras and chameleons: the defensive echoistCHAPTER FIVE: Hosts and henchmen: the self-destructive echoistPart III: Over-valued ideas, god-like objects, and faithCHAPTER SIX: Mistaken identity or what you will? Internal voices, narcissistic objects and the echoistCHAPTER SEVEN: Hera’s curse: faith and reason – a complex paradoxPart IV: A dynamic understanding of an echoistic-narcissistic complexCHAPTER EIGHT: Characters in search of an author: echoistic-narcissistic complexes and group dynamicsCHAPTER NINE: Is there anybody in there? The therapist as echoistPart V: Conclusions and future directionsCHAPTER TEN: Prometheus’ fire: being and becoming: an approach to treatment

    1 in stock

    £31.99

  • The Marks of a Psychoanalysis

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Marks of a Psychoanalysis

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIs someone radically different after an analysis? Since Freud, psychoanalysis has been questioned about what the psychoanalytic experience can change in someone's life beyond shedding light on symptoms. Drawing on literature, philosophy and a range of psychoanalytic theorists and practitioners, Luis Izcovich addresses the effects of psychoanalysis on the individual who has the desire and the courage to enter an analytic treatment and take it to its endpoint. The subject bears the marks of his childhood and these have repercussions on the choices that he makes in life. Do these marks determine him or does he have a choice in making his destiny? How do the transformations brought about in the transference change the subject? And does the analysis leave a distinguishing and locatable mark? Luis Izcovich attempts to answer these questions from a Lacanian perspective.Trade Review'Strange as the word "mark" may be in the context of psychoanalysis, Izcovich employs it to ask (and answer) one of the most challenging and important questions: How does one know that someone has been through an analysis? Avoiding all simplistic responses, he takes the reader into a largely uncharted territory, where symptoms give way to desire, and where desire is bound up with subjective time. As an unprecedented exploration of psychoanalytic markers and marks, this book is nothing but a landmark and, as such, truly indispensable.'--Dany Nobus, Professor of Psychoanalytic Psychology at Brunel University London, and chair of the Freud Museum LondonTable of ContentsIntroduction , The Mark of Time , Time and the unconscious , Borges, Lacan, poetry, time , Haste and exit , The moments to conclude , The Mark of the Symptom , The necessary symptom , What holds together , Lapsus of the knot , The writing of the symptom , The Mark of Separation , The clinic of limits , How did Winnicott analyse? , Ferenczi or the effaced trauma , Identity and separation , The mark of the father , The Effective Mark , The being of jouissance , Scraps of discourse , The sense of the sense-less , Grimaces of the real or the marks of repetition , Letter and nomination , The Mark of the Desire of the Analyst , The true journey , The marks of interpretation , The desire of the analyst or the mark of gay sçavoir , Unprecedented satisfaction or the mark of the ending , The desire of the analyst and absolute difference , Postscript

    1 in stock

    £35.14

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Addiction as Existence

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisAddiction is often thought about in terms of cause, be that brain chemistry, attachment patterns or cognitive schemas. But this does not allow an understanding of what addiction 'is'. It does not illuminate how addiction is lived. A phenomenology of addiction reveals that addiction is characterised by an intolerance of pain, a pursuit of pleasure, immediacy, technocratic solutions, alienation, ambiguity and is drenched in deception. These are its individual clinical manifestations, but this is also the way life, in this century is lived.The addict is thus the ultimate 21st century subject, consuming without end, intolerant of emotion and unable to grasp their own limitations. Rather than embraced, these subjects act as a denied symptom, haunting late capitalism and exposing the vampire-like nature of our culture. As such, these subjects need to be treated not just as individuals who have "gone too far", but as victims of the political agenda shaping our lives. Thus the heart of the book is a description of addiction deepened by existential-phenomenological theory. This description is then used to understand the historical emergence of addiction, its socio-political manifestation and also the crucial issue of how to clinically treat the addict-subject.Table of ContentsAcknowledgementsPrefacePart I Setting the agenda1. An introduction to addiction2. What is existential phenomenology?3. Existing theories of addictionPart II Dimensions of the addictive lifeworld4. Temporal dimension of addiction 5. The lived body of addiction 6. Being-with-others in addiction 7. The worlding of addiction8. The symbolic aspects of addiction Part III Towards a recovery from addiction9. Treating the addicted subjectReferencesIndex

    15 in stock

    £31.99

  • Beyond Fragmentation: Clinical Journeys in

    Karnac Books Beyond Fragmentation: Clinical Journeys in

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis‘Profoundly honest, unflinching in examining her own history as a thinker and clinician, Ingrid Pedroni challenges us to see where we have been and where we have failed, each of us.’ Donna Orange, from the Foreword Ingrid Pedroni is multicultural to her core. Fully fluent in German, Italian, and English, she took that multilingual outlook to the varied world of psychoanalysis. Beginning her journey with a Jungian analysis, she later read The Restoration of the Self by Heinz Kohut and discovered a theoretical and clinical framework consistent with her Jungian experience. Thus began her engagement with different theoretical dimensions and clinical settings. Beyond Fragmentation is a masterly overview of the result of her open-minded exploration of not only traditional and contemporary psychoanalytic schools of thought, but also systemic family therapy, plus modern anthropology, theatre, and literature. Part I explores the integration of different theoretical and clinical models, with special reference to self psychology and relational psychoanalysis. Part II outlines significant areas of experience that build the sense of self and how it is represented in intra-psychic and inter-relational dimensions. Part III focuses on couple and family relations, their evolution over time, and how they represent an essential part of the self. The final part deals with the treatment of cultural diversity, the universality of attachment bonds, and the extreme specificity of their cultural expression. Throughout the book are clinical and theoretical concepts derived from authors such as Adler, Jung, Rank, Fromm, Ferenczi, Klein, Winnicott, Loewald, Bowlby, Bion, and, of course, Freud. The clinical examples illustrate how it is possible to weave together the various threads of theoretical thinking and clinical practice not only in the many diversified psychoanalytic schools, but also in the larger field of the psychotherapies. The varied themes covered include gender, couple relations, family therapy, spirituality, cultural diversity and integration, migration, transcultural psychotherapy, and collective trauma. This book is essential reading for trainee and practising clinicians, and may well help them to find their own integration of therapeutic experiences. Professionals active in social, educational, and psychological fields will also find much useful and engaging information to help them in their work.Trade Review‘This is an important and most welcome book because it develops not only innovative ways of conceptualising and working therapeutically in general, but also it demonstrates how the approach that it constructs can be applied to contexts beyond the conventional psychotherapy settings, including areas such as traumas of wars and migration. Using epistemological insights, in an accessible language, the author builds bridges across theoretical directions, linking theory to practice (with ample clinical material, respectfully presented), the intra-psychic with the inter-relational realms and the traditional therapies with cultural and religious beliefs. Above all, the book is written with sensitivity and compassion for both patients and therapists, and it will be invaluable not only for professional therapists and trainees but also for everyone who wishes to delve deeper into the human psyche in distress.’ -- Professor Renos K. Papadopoulos, PhD, University of Essex, clinical psychologist, Jungian psychoanalyst, family therapist‘It is my pleasure to write in support of Ingrid Pedroni’s outstanding publication, Beyond Fragmentation: Clinical Journeys in Contemporary Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy. It is a book that addresses the most important issues in clinical work from past to present, and, most significantly, leads us into a future of integration and dedication to the best in our field. As noted in the title of her Introduction, “Widening clinical practice in relation to other therapeutic schools as the future of psychoanalysis”, Pedroni begins with her own valuing of knowing the past and noting its movement into the present and what is to come. To provide some sense of the scope of the work, Pedroni follows with sections on: building therapeutic bridges, the search for subjectivity, working with couples, parents, families, transcultural psychotherapy, and, finally, the treatment of trauma in individuals and groups suffering migration and war. Throughout there are elegant clinical examples. I find much that is original here, but I’m most impressed by Pedroni’s chapter on Talking with God, in which she discusses “spirituality and religion in the therapeutic encounter”. This seldom-addressed aspect of therapeutic work illustrates, to my mind, the expansiveness of Pedroni’s inclusive attention to contemporary psychoanalysis and psychotherapy. I’m grateful for this opportunity to reflect on Ingrid Pedroni’s contribution to our understanding.’ -- Estelle Shane, PhD, training and supervising analyst, The Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis and the New Center for Psychoanalysis, Los Angeles‘Beyond Fragmentation is a true tour de force – a must-read for psychoanalytic clinicians and thinkers of all persuasions. Ingrid Pedroni has produced an amazingly comprehensive body of work that mirrors its author’s own developmental journey both personally and theoretically. Her book threads its way through the retrospective and the prospective and their intersections as she traverses and assimilates psychoanalytic theories, pressing cultural concerns and trauma from the individual to the collective. Her numerous and compelling clinical illustrations that are woven throughout cannot but stir the reader’s mind and heart. The book highlights her deep wisdom and humility as she models an attitude of openness and an abiding readiness to keep learning from students and patients, from colleagues and teachers, and from ongoing life lessons that instruct and humble us, even as they urge us to keep moving, to keep thinking and above all to keep feeling. Ingrid Pedroni’s Beyond Fragmentation will inspire, vitalise and richly inform the work of all clinicians and psychoanalytic thinkers.’ -- Hazel Ipp, Toronto Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis, ISIPSÉ, chief editor emerita of 'Psychoanalytic Dialogues'‘Beyond Fragmentation is a remarkable achievement. The use of diverse clinical experiences at its finest. Ingrid Pedroni integrates self psychology and relational psychoanalysis and makes comparisons among therapy schools that are lucid and, at times, magisterial. She captures the radical changes that are taking place in psychoanalytic epistemology, the search for “the creation of oneself”, culture and religion, and the dangers of either/or thinking about gender. She brings us close to the subtle, interpenetrating impact of couples, parents, and families on the individual self. Her thinking about how culture saturates one’s subjectivity is bold and inspiring, and ranges from individual to collective traumas. Pedroni’s writing resonates with the tensions and triumphs of the contemporary psychoanalytic moment, and likely will for another generation, if not beyond.’ -- Spyros D. Orfanos, PhD, ABPP, Director and Clinical Professor, New York University Postdoctoral Program for Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis'Profoundly honest, unflinching in examining her own history as a thinker and clinician, Ingrid Pedroni challenges us to see where we have been and where we have failed, each of us.’ -- Donna M. Orange, faculty and supervising analyst, Institute for the Psychoanalytic Study of Subjectivity, New York, from the Foreword'This book is an impressive philosophical and historical explication of psychological theory beginning with Freud through to the modern day. In particular, Pedroni's use of Kohut's model has changed my own originally sceptical response to his theory of self psychology. [...] Pedroni's clinical examples are clear and moving. [...] An inspiring read, the theme of integration of other models gives hope for the future of psychoanalysis.' -- Gillian Ingram, MBACP (Accred), psychodynamic therapist, BACP Therapy Today, 35:2, March, 2024Table of ContentsIntroduction: Widening clinical practice in relation to other therapeutic schools as the future of psychoanalysis Part I: The need to build therapeutic bridges 1. From drives to relations through culture, the new epistemological paradigm of psychoanalysis 2. Beyond Freud: a contemporary integrative approach to obsessive-compulsive disorder 3. Integrating self psychology and relational psychoanalysis Part II: The search for subjectivity 1. Creating the self 2. Talking with God: spirituality and religion in the therapeutic encounter 3. Gender identity and subjectivity Part III: Couples, parents, families: multiple relational dimensions, multiple selves, and sometimes multiple therapists in coordinated treatment 1. The life cycle of the couple relation 2. Couples of spouses and couples of therapists in the dialectic of mutual recognition 3. Family relations in therapy Part IV: Transcultural psychotherapy and the treatment of individual and collective traumas of migration and wars 1. Transcultural psychotherapy 2. Migrations: cultural mourning and cultural contaminations 3. War, trauma, memory, and resilience

    1 in stock

    £27.54

  • Karnac Books In Session on the Thread of Affect and Emotion

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisWith contributions from Sara Boffito, Lesley Caldwell, Roosevelt Cassorla, Giuseppe Civitarese, Maria Teresa Flores, Be''atrice Ithier, Howard B. Levine, Ruggero Levy, Mauro Manica, Maria Grazia Oldoini, and Rene'' Roussillon. In Session, on the Thread of Affect and Emotion: Contemporary Approaches is divided into four parts. The first looks at the Freudian and Bionian models and the book begins its journey with an investigation of Freudian metapsychology from Rene'' Roussillon. The second part explores the aesthetic dimension of psychoanalysis and the link with truth, with a focus on emotions, dreams, and non-dreams. The third part concerns defensive issues experienced by the analyst and patient in the consulting room and the fourth and final part concerns the intersubjectivity of affect. Mauro Manica and Maria Grazia Oldoini highlight the shift that occurred with Melanie Klein and confirmed by Wilfred Bion in his theory of early links between love, hate, knowledge. It is interesting to see the differing approaches of these contributors from many different countries: France, Italy, Portugal, Brazil, the United States, and the United Kingdom. Whilst their approach to affect and emotion is influenced by their own cultural specificities and creativity, they all emphasise not only the shared affect, but also the emotional presence between the two protagonists. In this way, they give access to the deepest affective sediments, making this a must-read for all practising psychoanalysts and those with an academic interest.

    1 in stock

    £22.79

  • Karnac Books Specificities of Psychoanalytic Treatment

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £28.49

  • Introducing Freud: A Graphic Guide

    Icon Books Introducing Freud: A Graphic Guide

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisFreud revolutionized the way we think about ourselves. His psychoanalytic terms such as Id, Ego, libido, neurosis and Oedipus Complex have become a part of our everyday vocabulary. But do we know what they really mean? Introducing Freud successfully demystifies the facts of Freud's discovery of psychoanalysis. Irreverent and witty but never trivial, the book tells the story of Freud's life and ideas from his upbringing in 19th-century Vienna, his early medical career and his encounter with cocaine, to the gradual evolution of his theories on the unconscious, dreams and sexuality. With its combination of brilliantly clever artwork and incisive text, this book has achieved international success as one of the most entertaining and informative introductions to the father of psychoanalysis.Trade Review"'Zarate's artwork is outstanding and Appignanesi's texts are solidly researched and clearly presented.' Washington Post"

    2 in stock

    £8.54

  • Bridges: Metaphor for Psychic Processes

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Bridges: Metaphor for Psychic Processes

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book focuses on a number of psychodynamic concepts, processes, symptoms, and also achievements in terms of the bridge and the bridging functions. It deals with questions of psychological growth, creativity, and the arts.Trade Review'In a time when interdisciplinary theory has too often been content merely to splice together the tag ends of opposed psychoanalytic ideas, Rosemary Gordon emerges as a true builder of psychological bridges. The basis of her thinking offers the traveler not only safe passage between Freud and Jung and Winnicott and Klein, but also stunningly beautiful views of the still untrammeled depths of human experience that stretch between and below what these great pioneers and their followers have so far managed to develop.'- John E. Beebe'It is a pleasure and an honor to have been asked to write some introductory remarks to this highly important work by Rosemary Gordon, fittingly entitled Bridges. I would venture to say that, like myself, the reader of this volume soon will come to appreciate the author's deep concern and special skill in building bridges - bridges in a great many directions.'- From the Foreword by Mario Jacoby'I have read the chapters of this book, which have been sent me and I am very impressed by Rosemary Gordon's approach to the topic. She has developed and expanded the idea of bridging as a way of perceiving and understanding clinical, social and mythological material.'The book contains many useful ways of understanding various clinical and conceptual issues and problems, so that psychoanalysts, psychotherapists and psychologists, trained in other orientations, could find that they obtain not only illumination for their own approach, but also a deeper appreciation of the contributions of the Analytical Psychologists to the understanding of mental pain and mental phenomena.'In fact, Rosemary Gordon's book Bridges: Metaphors for Psychic Processes is itself a "bridge", not only between ideas, concepts and clinical problems encountered by those working with mentally ill patients, but also between herself and other colleagues in the related disciplines of anthropology, sociology, philosophy and the natural sciences, any of whom could have their ways of thinking enriched by reading this book.'- Pearl KingTable of ContentsForeword -- Preface -- Introduction -- Prologue -- Jung: rebel son or prophet? -- Conflict: combat or dance of the soul? -- The role of self-awareness in a changing culture -- Moral values and analytic insights -- Bridges: Intrapsychic Structures and Functions -- Penis as bridge -- Gods and deintegrates -- Archetypes on the couch -- The location of archetypal experience -- Big self, little self, and individuation -- The drive towards death: a vector of the self -- Symbols: content and process -- Bridges Broken: Clinical Experience and Practice -- Projective identification -- Transference as fulcrum of analysis -- Countertransference: the twinning of Eros and Agape -- Narcissism and the self: who am I that I love? -- Masochism: the shadow of veneration and worship -- Paedophilia: normal and abnormal -- Curing and healing -- Bridges Built: Creativity and the Arts -- Birth and creativity -- Creativity and therapy -- Creativity and archetype -- Theatre: out there and in here -- Look! He has come through! -- Jung’s concept of synchronicity -- Creativity in the second half of life -- A Last View—Over the Bridge

    1 in stock

    £59.84

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Primitive Edge of Experience

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisOgden constructs an anatomy and physiology of the psychic apparatus based on the interplay of the depressive, the paranoid-schizoid and the autistic - contiguous positions. The last position is his unique creation and refer to a primitive mode of experiencing that involves the moulding and shaping of boundaries.Trade Review'Since the appearance of Ogden's first book, Projective Identification and Psychotherapeutic Technique, I have been one of his many admirers, and his third book, The Primitive Edge of Experience, deepens still further my admiration of his abilities as a writer and as a psychoanalytic theoretician and clinician . Ogden's book is revolutionary in nature without being abstruse.'- Harold Searles, M.D.'Thomas Ogden, in The Primitive Edge of Experience, constructs an anatomy and physiology of the psychic apparatus based on the interplay of the depressive, the paranoid-schizoid, and the autistic-contiguous positions. The last position is his unique creation and refers to a primitive mode of experiencing that involves the moulding and shaping of boundaries. Here, he expands on Tustin's and Bick's formulations.His ideas are subtle and illuminating, especially for those clinicians who are involved with patients whose psychopathology can be traced back to the origins of psychic structure and mental processes. The in-depth understanding this book provides will cause therapists to re-examine many treatment situations in terms of Ogden's formulations and gain insights about transference-countertransference interactions that might have been unnoticed and disruptive to the therapeutic process.'- Peter L. Giovacchini, M.D.'Ogden has creatively expanded and deepened our understanding of early object relations and their affects on normal and pathological development of personality structure. He has introduced a major addition to the logical extension of the psychological states addressed by Klein's concept of the paranoid-schizoid and depressive positions, the 'autistic-contiguous position', dealing with the mental data that are closer to the psyche-soma. Throughout this remarkably fine book, exquisite clinical data support convincingly each creative new addition to early object relations theory and its clinical application.'- Bryce Boyer, M.DTable of ContentsIntroduction -- The Structure of Experience -- The Autistic-Contiguous Position -- The Schizoid Condition -- The Transitional Oedipal Relationship in Female Development -- The Threshold of the Male Oedipus Complex -- The Initial Analytic Meeting -- Misrecognitions and the Fear of Not Knowing

    15 in stock

    £40.84

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Motherhood Constellation: A Unified View of

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe author addresses the field of infant mental health. He draws on his experience - in both the lab and the clinic - to present an integrated model of treatment for both infants and their parents.Trade Review'This wonderful book will be of enormous value to all those that are helping families... Stern's analytic approach to each of the different kinds of therapeutic family intervention gives us all an insight and choices as we work with parents in difficulty. This is a positive, supportive guide for all professionals who work with young families.'- T. Terry Brazelton, M.D., Harvard Medical School'In this groundbreaking book, Daniel Stern has synthesized diverse empirical, clinical, and theoretical perspectives on mother infant therapies. What emerges from this creative synthesis is a compelling and clinically useful new construct. This book is destined to become an enduring classic. I look forward to the debates and discussions it will inspire.'- Charles H. Zeanah, M.D., Louisiana State University Medical Center'This fascinating book builds and crosses bridges between psychoanalysis and interpersonal systems. Daniel Stern's novel ideas, derived from work with parents and infants, ultimately will inform our thinking about psychotherapy across the lifespan.'- Lee Combrinck-Graham, M.D.'Daniel Stern once again breaks new ground in this wonderfully perceptive book. He combines the scientist's gift for analysis with the clinician's well-developed intuition. The result is a book that transcends narrow theoretical models and challenges the reader to do the same.'- Alicia F. Lieberman, PhD., University of California, San Francisco'Daniel Stern's earlier book The Interpersonal World of the Infant was a classic, and I predict that this book will be another.'- Ethel Person, M.d., Columbia UniversityTable of ContentsIntroduction -- The Clinical System in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy -- An Overview of the Clinical Situation -- The Parents' Representational World -- The Parents' Representations Enacted -- The Parent-Infant Interaction -- The Nature and Formation of the Infant's Representations -- The Infant's Representations Viewed Clinically -- The Therapist -- Therapeutic Approaches in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy and Their Commonalities -- Approaches That Aim to Change the Parents' Representations -- Approaches That Aim to Change the Interactive Behaviors -- Commonalities Among the Different Approaches -- Synthesis -- The Motherhood Constellation -- Some Wider Implications for Other Clinical Situations

    15 in stock

    £37.04

  • Herbert Rosenfeld at Work: The Italian Seminars

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Herbert Rosenfeld at Work: The Italian Seminars

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisBetween 1978 and 1985 Dr Herbert Rosenfeld was one of a number of British analysts invited by a group of Societa di Psicoanalisi Italiani members to conduct a series of seminars and supervisions for the purpose of deepening and refining that group's clinical skills and theoretical understanding. This book is an illuminating record of that encounter, and a warm tribute to the significant influence of Rosenfeld's contribution.It is divided into two parts - 'Theoretical' and 'Clinical', and based on a selection of verbatim transcripts recorded at the time. These transcripts, with their dialogical form, succeed in capturing much of the specificity of oral exchange, and thus convey a strong impression of Rosenfeld the man as much as clinician or theoretician.Rosenfeld remained to the end a continuously creative analyst and these 'last thoughts' provide the reader with ample evidence of his undimmed gifts. His subtle intuitions, meticulously close attention to both patient's and analyst's interpretations, and fine appreciation of the intricacies of the analytic encounter, are abundantly present.Trade Review'Rosenfeld's particular theoretical approach is a combination of his clinical experience and his capacity for- or, one should say, art of observation and interpretation. He has the gift of an astonishing capacity for identification with psychotic sufferance, defenses, and ways of thinking.'- Riccardo Steiner from the Preface

    1 in stock

    £54.14

  • The Subject of Addiction: Psychoanalysis and The

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Subject of Addiction: Psychoanalysis and The

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisDrugs and drug use are an integral part of human culture. Yet we know hardly anything about drugs, at least not the kind of knowledge that would help us to understand how drugs affect people and how people beome addicted to drugs. This is most surprising in the light of the vast amount of knowledge accumulated in the sciences. Psychoanalysis might not be an obvious choice for the treatment of addiction. Nevertheless, it is in an excellent position to make a contribution to a problem that has so far defied much of our understanding. By inviting people to speak about themselves, psychoanalysis has established a unique way of collecting clinical material, a material that surely must be immediately relevant coming as it does from the horse's mouth. With addiction on the increase, this fact alone justifies the necessity for a different approach.Providing a theoretical foundation for the argument that psychoanalysis should be seriously considered, and where possible incorporated into the treament of addicts, this thoughtful and innovative book can serve as an orientation in the ongoing front-line battle with addicts and addiction.Divided into three parts, the first part deals with Freud's writings on addicton including an in-depth examination of his so called 'cocaine papers', the second part examines how various strands of Freud's work on addiction were continued by his followers, while the last part formulates a Lacanian theory of addiction. This book is indispensible for anyone interested in addiction, the evolution of Freud's work, or contemporary psychoanalysis.Trade ReviewDrugs and drug use are an integral part of human culture. Yet we know hardly anything about drugs, at least not the kind of knowledge that would help us to understand how drugs affect people and how people beome addicted to drugs. This is most surprising in the light of the vast amount of knowledge accumulated in the sciences. Psychoanalysis might not be an obvious choice for the treatment of addiction. Nevertheless, it is in an excellent position to make a contribution to a problem that has so far defied much of our understanding. By inviting people to speak about themselves, psychoanalysis has established a unique way of collecting clinical material, a material that surely must be immediately relevant coming as it does from the horse's mouth. With addiction on the increase, this fact alone justifies the necessity for a different approach. Providing a theoretical foundation for the argument that psychoanalysis should be seriously considered, and where possible incorporated into the treament of addicts, this thoughtful and innovative book can serve as an orientation in the ongoing front-line battle with addicts and addiction.Divided into three parts, the first part deals with Freud's writings on addicton including an in-depth examination of his so called 'cocaine papers', the second part examines how various strands of Freud's work on addiction were continued by his followers, while the last part formulates a Lacanian theory of addiction. This book is indispensible for anyone interested in Addiction, the evolution of Freud's work, or contemporary psychoanalysis.Table of ContentsForeword -- Preface -- Classical Foundations for a Theory on Addiction: The Energetics of Libido and the Economics of Desire -- Introduction -- The place of cocaine in the work of Freud -- Freud's pre-analytical period -- A limit to Freud's dream -- Freud’s war during the “inter-bellum”: the death-drive and the extermination of happiness -- Conclusion -- The Post-Freudian Reduction of a Field and the Fruits of a Confrontation -- Introduction -- Between drive and ego: the ascent of the subject -- Elements for a Lacanian Theory (and Treatment) of Addiction: The Administration of Toxicity -- Introduction -- The pleasure before death: the symbolic, the imaginary and jouissance -- The death of pleasure: the real, the body and jouissance -- Science, addiction and diagnosis: a question of administration -- Addiction and discourse: a moral question and the ethics of treatment -- Conclusion

    1 in stock

    £46.54

  • Illusions and Disillusions of Psychoanalytic Work

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Illusions and Disillusions of Psychoanalytic Work

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIllusions and Disillusions of Psychoanalytic Work recounts and explores the disappointing and sometimes tragic evolutions of the treatments of certain patients who are resistant to the effects of analytic work. In this book Andre Green reports cases taken from his own experience and that of his collaborators. He points out moreover, that such cases have never been absent from the series of analysands that he has treated, from the early days of his practice up until today, without minimizing his counter-transference reactions or their possible impact on these disappointing evolutions.Trade Review'Andre Green's lucidity . combined with his rigorous approach, underlies the elaboration of this book as well as that of his work in general, but it does not lead him to radical pessimism. On the contrary, it opens out on to a note of hope, for, after giving a lucid account of these disappointing and sometimes tragic evolutions, the author seeks to account for their causes. This also attests to the depth of his psychoanalytic and human commitment to these difficult patients, a commitment that he does not regret in spite of these evolutions of which he has "recollections of disappointing experiences,but not bad memories".'- Christine Delourmel, from the PrefaceTable of ContentsPsychoanalytic Ideas and Applications Series , Preface , Introduction , Presentation , Theoretical Study , From the treatment of neuroses to the crisis of psychoanalysis , Lacanian thinking on language , The setting and its interpretation , Die Entstellung , The metaphorization of analytic speech , The negative therapeutic reaction , The notion of failure , Variety of traumas , Some effects of the primitive superego , The ego prior to repression , Libidinal styles , Drive fusion and defusion , The modifications of the ego and the work of the negative , Diverse critical situations and acute somatizations , Causes and remedies , Recent suggestions concerning the treatment of cases resistant to the therapeutic effect of analysis , Methodological principles of psychoanalysis and the psychotherapies , Conclusions , Clinical Study , (A) Some examples drawn from the experience of collaborators , (B) Personal memories of some case histories , Illusions and Disillusions of Psychoanalytic Work , The internalization of the negative , Hypotheses concerning the negative beyond clinical findings , An encounter at the end of the journey , Postscript

    1 in stock

    £33.24

  • Attachment Theory and Psychoanalysis

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Attachment Theory and Psychoanalysis

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book undertakes to demontrate that the relationship between attachment theory and psychoanalysis is more complex than adherants of either community generally recognize. Beginning with a brief overview of attachment theory and some key findings of attachment research, and continuing through psychoanalytic approaches from Freud to Daniel Stern, this book offers a unique contribution to our understanding of our the subject.Trade Review'To be a world leader in one discipline is impressive enough; to be at the cutting edge of two is nothing short of extraordinary. Fonagy straddles the worlds of psychoanalysis and attachment theory like a colossus; this is the book every student, colleague and even rival theoreticians has been waiting for. With characteristic wit, philosophical sophistication, scholarship, humanity, incisiveness and creativity, Fonagy succinctly describes the links, differences, and future directions of his twin themes.'Central to the book is his influential theory about the origins of the capacity for mentalization: that secure attachment is a pre-condition for the development of a sense of self and other. Fonagy links this to psychoanalytic ideas about symbolization, reality testing, and play in normal development, and the childhood origins of concrete thinking, delusion, and pathological defences in borderline personality disorder.'Attachment Theory and Psychoanalysis is destined to take its place as one of a select list of essential psychology books of the decade.'- Jeremy Holmes, Senior Lecturer in Psychotherapy, University of Exeter'[Fonagy's] magisterial scholarship should ensure that the book remains a key psychological reference book for many years to come.'- Ann Casement, The Journal of Analytical Psychology'An extraordinary analysis. Peter Fonagy's book offers a unique and remarkable contribution to our understanding of the meaningful relationship that has evolved between psychoanalytic and attachment theories...The volume will become an invaluable resource for developmental psychoanalysis.'- Joy D. Osofsky, Professor at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Centre, Coeditor of WAIMH Handbook of Infant Mental HealthTable of ContentsPreamble -- Introduction to Attachment Theory -- Key Findings of Attachment Research -- Freud's Models and Attachment Theory -- Structural Approaches: The North American Structural Approach -- Modifications of the Structural Model -- The Klein—Bion Model -- The Independent School of British Psychoanalysis and Its Relation to Attachment Theory -- North American Object Relations Theorists and Attachment Theory -- Modern Psychoanalytic Infant Psychiatry: The Work of Daniel Stern -- The Interpersonal-Relational Approach: From Sullivan to Mitchell -- Psychoanalytic Attachment Theorists -- Summary: What Do Psychoanalytic Theories and Attachment Theory Have in Common? -- How Can Attachment Theory Benefit from Psychoanalytic Insights? -- Conclusion

    1 in stock

    £42.99

  • Affect Regulation, Mentalization and the

    Taylor & Francis Ltd Affect Regulation, Mentalization and the

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn a brilliant examination of the frontiers of human emotion and cognition, four prominent psychoanalysts combine the perspectives of developmental psychology, attachment theory and psychoanalytic technique. The result of this marriage of disciplines is a bold, energetic and ultimately encouraging vision for the psychoanalytic treatment.Trade Review'A remarkable synthesis of developmental theory and research on the evolution of the child's capacity for metallization (reflective functioning), affect regulation, and the sense of the self, and the contributions of the development of these functions to the understanding and treatment of psychological disturbances in children and adults. An intellectual and clinical tour de force, integrating diverse theory and data from neurobiology, behavioural genetics, the philosophy of the mind, and psychosocial development, always with the focus on understanding the nature of severe psychological disturbances and their treatment in the psychotherapeutic context. This volume will have a profound impact on both clinical practice and clinical research.'- Sidney J. Blatt, Ph.D, Professor, Psychiatry and Psychology, Yale University'This book is already a classic. It puts psychoanalysis on the contemporary scientific map and permits a thoughtful combination of the different psychoanalytic schools. On top of that, it has huge implications for clinical practice. What more could one want?'- Paul Verhaeghe, Ph.D., Professor of Clinical Psychology, Department of Psychoanalysis, University of Ghent, Belgium'This is a book worth savoring, not just reading. The authors' breadth is truly staggering, traversing terrain from philosophy of mind, to developmental research on children's capacity to represent their own and others' mental states, to research on severe personality disorders, to clinical observations of infants, children and adults - all within a framework grounded in attachment theory. It is one of the first truly convincing efforts to show how the body of attachment research can actually influence the way we practice with many of our patients.' - Drew Westen'The four co-authors write in a clear single voice. Their collaboration makes the book stunning in its scope, powerfully reasoned, clinically rich in telling cases, and historically sophisticated...What an intellectual delight to have a book that stays in your mind, continues to challenge, and offers new directions for understanding.'- Ed Tronick, Ph.D., Chief of the Child Development Unit; Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical SchoolTable of ContentsIntroduction -- Theoretical Perspectives -- Attachment and Reflective Function: Their Role in Self-Organization -- Historical and Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Affects and Affect Regulation -- The Behavior Geneticist's Challenge to a Psychosocial Model of the Development of Mentalization -- Developmental Perspectives -- The Social Biofeedback Theory of Affect-Mirroring: The Development of Emotional Self-Awareness and Self-Control in Infancy -- The Development of an Understanding of Self and Agency -- "Playing with Reality": Developmental Research and a Psychoanalytic Model for the Development of Subjectivity -- Marked Affect-Mirroring and the Development of Affect-Regulative Use of Pretend Play -- Developmental Issues in Normal Adolescence and Adolescent Breakdown -- Clinical Perspectives -- The Roots of Borderline Personality Disorder in Disorganized Attachment -- Psychic Reality in Borderline States -- Mentalized Affectivity in the Clinical Setting -- Epilogue

    1 in stock

    £42.99

  • The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisDr Lacan's writings, and especially the seminars for which he has become famous, have provoked intense controversies in French analytic circles, requiring as they do a radical reappraisal of the legacy bequeathed by Freud. This volume is based on a year's seminar, which is of particular importance because he was addressing a larger, less specialist audience than ever before, amongst whom he could not assume familiarity with his work. For his listeners then, and for his readers now, he wanted "to introduce a certain coherence into the major concepts on which psycho-analysis is based", namely the unconscious, repetition, the transference and the drive.In re-defining these four concepts he explores the question that, as he puts it, moves from "Is psycho-analysis a science?" to "What is a science that includes psycho-analysis?" Dr Lacan argues in particular that there is a structural affinity between psycho-analysis, construed as the science of the unconscious, and language - the science of linguistics being one of the significant discoveries of our time. He also discusses the relation of psycho-analysis to religion, and reveals his particular stance on a wide range of topics, such as sexuality and death, love and libido, alienation, interpretation, repression and desire.This book constitutes the essence of Dr Lacan's sensibility. There is no clearer statement of the ideas and issues which have aroused such passionate reactions in France, and which can now gain the hearing they deserve in the English-speaking world.Trade ReviewDr Lacan's writings, and especially the seminars for which he has become famous, have provoked intense controversies in French analytic circles, requiring as they do a radical reappraisal of the legacy bequeathed by Freud. This volume is based on a year's seminar, which is of particular importance because he was addressing a larger, less specialist audience than ever before, amongst whom he could not assume familiarity with his work. For his listeners then, and for his readers now, he wanted "to introduce a certain coherence into the major concepts on which psycho-analysis is based", namely the unconscious, repetition, the transference and the drive.In re-defining these four concepts he explores the question that, as he puts it, moves from "Is psycho-analysis a science?" to "What is a science that includes psycho-analysis?" Dr Lacan argues in particular that there is a structural affinity between psycho-analysis, construed as the science of the unconscious, and language - the science of linguistics being one of the significant discoveries of our time. He also discusses the relation of psycho-analysis to religion, and reveals his particular stance on a wide range of topics, such as sexuality and death, love and libido, alienation, interpretation, repression and desire.This book constitutes the essence of Dr Lacan's sensibility. There is no clearer statement of the ideas and issues which have aroused such passionate reactions in France, and which can now gain the hearing they deserve in the English-speaking world.Table of ContentsPreface to the English-Language Edition -- Editor's Note -- Excommunication -- The Unconscious and Repetition -- The Freudian Unconscious and Ours -- Of the Subject of Certainty -- Of the Network of Signifiers -- Tuché and Automaton -- Of The Gaze as Objet Petit a -- The Split between the Eye and the Gaze -- Anamorphosis -- The Line and Light -- What is a Picture? -- The Transference and the Drive -- Presence of the Analyst -- Analysis and Truth or the Closure of the Unconscious -- Sexuality in the Defiles of the Signifier -- The Deconstruction of the Drive -- The Partial Drive and its Circuit -- From Love to the Libido -- The Field of the Other and back to the Transference -- The Subject and the Other: Alienation -- The Subject and the Other: Aphanisis -- Of the Subject Who is Supposed to Know, of the First Dyad, and of the Good -- From Interpretation to the Transference -- To Conclude -- In You More than You -- Translator's Note

    1 in stock

    £27.99

  • The Aesthetic Development: The Poetic Spirit of

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Aesthetic Development: The Poetic Spirit of

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis'Few people would be better qualified than Meg Harris Williams to write this innovative and eagerly anticipated post-Kleinian book. Deeply versed in the opus of Bion and Meltzer, Harris Williams enhances the concept of "catastrophic change". The analyst who "eschews memory and desire" observes the subtle interplay of transference and countertransference (Meltzer's "counter dreaming") as it works through aesthetic conflicts. The ensuing reciprocity of the patients and analysts unconscious is revealed as the aesthetical and ethical basis of psychoanalysis. In that sense the psychoanalytical process parallels that of poetic and artistic inspiration. They are all generated by creative internal objects. Harris Williams' intellectual tour de force demonstrates convincingly the human capacity for symbolic thinking that underlies literary, artistic and psychoanalytic creativity. Her encyclopaedic understanding of literature, art and psychoanalysis contributes to this book's virtuosity.'- Irene Freeden, Senior Member of the British Association of PsychotherapistsTrade Review'This book points ahead into the future of psychoanalysis. Meg Harris Williams has done what few in our field are qualified to do. Her intimate knowledge of the thinking of Donald Meltzer, combined with her deep understanding of the arts, enables her to use Bion's three great vertices - of art, of science and of religion - as the basis for a work of extraordinary integration. Beyond the many insights we are given into the aesthetic dimension of our science, we continually glimpse the "O" - the truth that cannot be spoken, but whose beauty can be known. There are whole realms of understanding ahead of us yet to be entered, and no one who reads this book can remain unaware of them.'- Dorothy Hamilton, Training therapist and supervisor, Association for Group and Individual PsychotherapyTable of ContentsIntroduction , Psychoanalysis: an art or a science? , Aesthetic concepts of Bion and Meltzer , The domain of the aesthetic object , Sleeping beauty , Moving beauty , Psychoanalysis as an art form , Afterword

    1 in stock

    £34.99

  • The Vibrant Relationship: A Handbook for Couples

    Taylor & Francis Ltd The Vibrant Relationship: A Handbook for Couples

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisCreating and sustaining a vibrant relationship is one of the most difficult challenges we come across in our lives. But when we do succeed, it is the source of a truly deep and lasting happiness. To succeed, we need some tools to help us on our way.The subject of this book is the Dialogue of Acknowledgement, an extremely efficient and loving tool that can help people come to grips with problems as well as form the basis for a new way of living and ethical practice, both within the couple and in all other relationships in life.This book hopes to introduce the reader to a way to a shared life of openness, curiosity, acknowledgement, appreciation, and recognition and help them to learn how to converse and listen so that it will be possible for you to explore yourselves and each other in new ways.Trade ReviewThere is no quick and easy way to a mature, strong, and mindful relationship. The journey consists of small steps towards creating increasing confidence for each other as you learn to counter your old habits, survival strategies, and seemingly uncontrollable emotions. Experiencing the way differences can be enriching and not just threatening for your relationship is also part of the processes described in this book. The Vibrant Relationship is not just a book that promotes marriage or relationship per se. It is an optimistic book about new opportunities which are just within our reach - if we make a little effort.Table of ContentsSeries Editor’s Foreword -- Part -- Introduction -- It is Never Too Late to Have a Good Relationship -- Why Do We Get Lost in Love? -- The Evolutionary Spiral of Relationships -- What are You Carrying in Your Baggage? -- The Ability to Love is Formed During Infancy -- Exercises -- Your Brain is a Partner as Well as an Opponent -- How about Tonight, Darling? -- Part 2 -- Pathways to the Vibrant Relationship -- Conflicts are Pure Gold -- Before the Dialogue of Acknowledgement -- The Dialogue of Acknowledgement Step by Step -- New Ways of Being -- New Steps – For the Rest of Our Lives -- Our Life Together -- The Realtionship Therapy Centre

    1 in stock

    £34.19

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Comprehensive Dictionary of Psychoanalysis

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book provides easy to read, concise, and clinically useful explanations of over 1800 terms and concepts from the field of psychoanalysis. A history of each term is included in its definition and so is the name of its originator. The attempt is made to demonstrate how the meanings of the term under consideration might have changed, with new connotations accruing with the passage of time and with growth of knowledge. Where indicated and possible, the glossary includes diverse perspectives on a given idea and highlights how different analysts have used the same term for different purposes and with different theoretical aims in mind.Trade ReviewRanging from 'abreaction' and 'abstinence' , 'basic rule' and 'beta elements', and 'clarification' and 'conflict' through ' metapsychology' and 'malignant narcissism' to ' xenophobia' and 'zoophilia' , the terms and ideas covered in the book make for a panoramic view of the psychoanalytic universe. The collection is wide-ranging, eclectic, and fundamentally generous: it includes old, new, controversial, odd-sounding, familiar, unfamiliar, all sorts of terms and phrases from the one hundredyears history of psychoanalysis. While generally crisp and pithy, a definition here and there also includes an enderaing anecdote, a wry remark regarding the hidden ironies in the concept at hand, and a deliciously surprising linkage with another idea in the book.The book differs from the psychoanalytic glossaries published so far in five important ways: First and foremost, with the exception of Charles Rycroft's 1976 book , all these glossaries are edited volumes. Second, none of the previous glossaries are as inclusive of analytic ideas from diverse 'schools' and from an internationally representative group of analytic theorists and innovators. Third, there is a steadfastly clinical undertone to this book, something that the other books in this genre lack. Fourth, the list of terms included is much more comprehensive and up-to-date. Finally, the deft admixture of scholarly attitude with an occasional playfulness, even impishness, marks this book as a truly unique contribution."Wearing his erudition with the lightness of a Renaissance humanist and spanning the psychoanalytic universe from 'Abreaction' to 'Zone of proximal development'in beutifully crafted essays, Salman Akhtar proves himself to the lineal descendant of Erasmus and Montaigne. We shall not look uon his like again".-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN PSYCHOANALYTIC ASSOCIATION"AKHTAR HAS ASSEMBLED A WONDERFUL ARRAY OF TERMS, MANY OF THEM QUITE EXOTIC, SUPPORTED BY AN EXTRAORDINARY BIBLIOGRAPHY.wE ARE VERY GRATEFUL TO HIM FOR THE MASSIVE AMOUNT OF WORK HE HAS DONE, AND---LET'S JUST ADMIT IT--WE HAVE BORROWED FROM HIS BOOK DOZENS AND DOZENS OF TIME"-Elsee Samburg & Elizabeth AuchinclossEditors of the Forthcoming Psychoanalytic Glossary of the American Psychoanalytic Association.'...destined to become a classic reference book for psychoanalysis and an indispensable part of the library of psychoanalysts, academics and anyone seriously interested in psychoanalysis. This encyclopaedic and accessible work takes a significant step forward in the crucial task of building a common vocabulary for the relatively young discipline of psychoanalysis. Akhtar defines each of the over 1800 concepts, sub-concepts and colloquial words, describes its history from the origin of each term to its current usage, identifies the outstanding issues, cites the relevant literature associated with each entry, synthesizes the views of differing psychoanalytic orientations, and comments on its clinical usefulness. He also includes concepts from "applied" psychoanalysis such as the Holocaust studies, immigration literature, psychoanalytically informed political writing, and culture-specific psychoanalytic ideas from non-Western societies. In addition, Akhtar reviews twenty-six psychoanalytic glossaries, dictionaries, encyclopaedias, and the concordance of the Standard Edition. This is a monumental achievement, a resource to enhance communication worldwide, which sets the standard by which all future dictionaries of psychoanalysis will be judged.'- Donald Campbell (UK)'Salman Akhtar's magisterial compendium of terms and concepts is an extremely useful addition to the world-wide library of psychoanalysis. It offers an extensive view of the field and opens windows to wide-ranging conceptual landscapes. As a result, it will be of great appeal to the academic and the clinician alike.'- Leopold Nosek (Brazil)'...a highly impressive, clear, and objective review of psychoanalytic concepts, controversies, and new developments. The richness of entries, covering authors from the broadest spectrum of psychoanalytic theories, facilitates the reader's orientation through the complex world of well-accepted terminology, as well as through the historically relevant and even idiosyncratic formulations that are scattered throughout the psychoanalytic literature. Akhtar's stance is fair in comparing the use of the same terms by different authors and in summarizing the controversies in a particular realm. His book is easy and enjoyable to read and an occasional subtle, but always respectful, ironic comment conveys the author's view regarding a particular point in an honest yet unintrusive way. The inclusion of an appendix on the previously published glossaries and of an extensive and up-to-date bibliography gives this dictionary a truly scholarly dimension.'- Otto Kernberg (USA)'This well-researched and extremely informative dictionary is not only a dictionary; it is a historical account of our field, a treasure trove of useful references, and a handbook of technical guidelines. Consulting it yields instant knowledge; reading it gives pleasure. It should be in the possession of every psychoanalyst and psychotherapist.'- Henk-Jan Dalewijk (Holland)'In the specific case of dictionaries, the scarce relevance of typology is well known. Specialists point out that the inevitably imprecise limitations in the definition of types render all typologies unsatisfactory. This is not so in the case of the Comprehensive Dictionary of Psychoanalysis by Salman Akhtar. Here, the word 'comprehensive' indicates what distinguishes this work from other, apparently similar, efforts. Besides noting the originality, clarity, and authority of the entries, the reader will find that the themes confronted by the author cover an unusual range of conceptual extension and topical relevance. From a methodological viewpoint, Akhtar creates a new model that deserves the specialist's full attention. He is an author who is well known for the variety of his interests and this, surely, has been the source of inspiration for this important contribution.'- Jorge Canestri (Italy)'The work is of high quality, and will be interesting and useful to those studying or researching in the field of psychoanalysis.'- T.L. Stout, ChoiceTable of ContentsINTRODUCTION, DEFINITIONS OF PSYCHOANALYTIC TERMS AND CONCEPTS, AN ANNOTATED LIST OF PSYCHOANALYTIC GLOSSARIES, REFERENCES

    15 in stock

    £44.64

  • Dream Life: A Re-examination of the

    Karnac Books Dream Life: A Re-examination of the

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £21.84

  • Psychoanalytic Aesthetics: An Introduction to the

    1 in stock

    £24.69

  • A Meltzer Reader: Selections from the Writings of

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  • The Kleinian Development Part 3: The Clinical

    Karnac Books The Kleinian Development Part 3: The Clinical

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    1 in stock

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  • First Thoughts: A Psychoanalytic Perspective on

    Karnac Books First Thoughts: A Psychoanalytic Perspective on

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis‘Any Psychoanalyst must find his own way and come upon well-known and well-established theories through experiences of his own realisations.’ So says W. R. Bion in his Commentary in Second Thoughts. In First Thoughts, Jayne Hankinson does just this. She presents a personal account of her own ‘realisations’ and discoveries during an attempt to give thought to ‘beginnings’. She explores the meaning and relevance of creation myths, leading to a deep realisation of how they unconsciously represent and shape much of our lives, even today. This exploration meanders through the Garden of Eden, leaving with a realisation that there is an ‘Adam’ and ‘Eve’ aspect in dynamic tension within each of our minds. This serpentine journey becomes a ‘hermeneutic loop’ in which dissatisfaction with parts of psychoanalytic theory leads to an engagement in the phenomena of beginnings and a consequent reappraisal and reinterpretation, via a closer look at Sigmund Freud, Melanie Klein, Donald Winnicott, and Wilfred Bion to formulate an understanding of what their ‘first thoughts’ may be. The book ends with the author’s own creation myth reshaped and a deeper awareness of how important ‘beginnings’ are.Table of ContentsA tribute to Chris Mawson Part I Dissatisfaction 1. My beginning 2. Creation myths 3. Presence and absence 4. The dispute 5. The chaos or the word 6. The binding of Hans 7. Circularity and straight lines 8 Initial thoughts Part II Engaging in the phenomenon 9. In the beginning 10. The garden 11. Conception stories 12. Vicissitudes of penetration 13. Magical structures 14. Wholeness 15. Tentative thoughts Part III Reappraisal 16. Freud’s first thoughts 17. Klein’s first thoughts 18. Winnicott’s first thoughts 19. Bion’s first thoughts 20. Gathered thoughts Part IV Reformulation 21. Modus vivendi 22. An elemental structure 23. Narcissism 24. Threads 25. To myth or not to myth 26. Final thoughts References Acknowledgements About the author

    1 in stock

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  • The Evil Imagination: Understanding and Resisting

    Karnac Books The Evil Imagination: Understanding and Resisting

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisRoger Kennedy has written a masterful investigation into the concept of evil. He begins with a general view of the subject before moving into more detailed analysis. First is a review of the science of evil, including evidence from neuroscience and social psychology. This is followed by psychoanalytical studies of the individual and groups before presenting an overview of the philosophy of evil. Also included are historical and social studies which inform an understanding of evil in action. Kennedy goes on to examine the nature of genocide using a main focus on the Holocaust and of slavery. Both of these “journeys to evil” remain relevant for understanding contemporary society and issues. The Nazi past continues to disturb and resonate decades on. The politics and social fabric of Western society was reliant on slavery as a foundation of economic wealth and is haunted by its inability to process the harsh reality of slavery and its continuing after-effects. Kennedy moves from there to a discussion on the genius of Shakespeare and his encapsulation of the essential features of how evil can develop and take over a person’s inner world. The book concludes with a summary of the main themes and a look at those who have resisted evil and what we can learn from them if we are to build a society that can resist the forces of evil. The book is informed by a psychoanalytic approach, with its emphasis on the power and influence of unconscious processes underlying human actions, and on the role of inner conflicting and elemental fears and anxieties often driving individual and group behaviours. It brings fresh insight to an eternal discourse.Trade Review‘Roger Kennedy brings wide-ranging perspectives to describe and understand this very difficult and compelling subject. History, philosophy, religion, morality, neuroscience, primatology, psychology, and other disciplines are brought together as well as refracted through psychoanalytic understandings. Human destructiveness is not a direct consequence of our animal instincts, nor is it innate. Rather, evil is a consequence of being human as he observes that our species “annihilates the human subject and obliterates human agency”. This is a tough and compelling read in resisting our species’ vicious destructiveness.’ -- Dr Jonathan Sklar, training analyst, British Psychoanalytical Society‘Dr Roger Kennedy worked as a Consultant Family Psychiatrist in the NHS at the famous Cassel Hospital in London for almost thirty years and was an Honorary Senior Lecturer in Psychiatry at Imperial College London. He has written widely on psychoanalysis and families at breaking point. His new book, The Evil Imagination, is a fascinating and ambitious exploration of one of the great subjects of our time: evil. One of the most thoughtful psychoanalytic thinkers of our time, Dr Kennedy asks what leads people to commit evil acts and how can we use the latest psychoanalytic thinking to make sense of evil?’ -- David Herman, writer and former TV producer of programmes on psychoanalysis and the history of madness‘We find ourselves surrounded by such an abundance of expressed evil that our own imaginations are drowned out by the lived atrocities. Roger Kennedy alerts us to the megalomania that has permitted humans to comfortably annihilate the other – body and culture – and how this is a leitmotif of the mass atrocities of both the past and present. We find some measure of comfort in his book through his illustrating how we can transform rage into scholarship, sorrow into insight, and helplessness into teaching. The Holocaust serves as the representative evil of our species. In immersing ourselves in Kennedy’s masterful yet accessible collection of groundbreaking neuroscience, uplifting poetry, and insight-providing psychoanalytic perspectives, we are able to use the best of who we are in order to honourably encounter the worst of who we are. In reading Kennedy's book, I feel redoubled in my efforts to unpack the obstructions to the good-enough affects in each of us. This, so that we will contain a counterweight to our destructiveness and thereby perhaps, just perhaps, we may survive.’ -- Harvey Schwartz, training and supervising analyst, Psychoanalytic Association of New York; host of the IPA podcast, Psychoanalysis On and Off the CouchTable of ContentsAbout the author 1. Terrains of evil 2. The science of evil 3. Psychoanalysis and evil 4. The philosophy of evil 5. Journeys to evil: The Holocaust and British-American slavery 6. Shakespeare and evil—the dagger of the mind 7. Summary and final comments Endnotes References Index

    1 in stock

    £24.69

  • Sexual Addiction: Psychoanalytic Concepts and the

    Karnac Books Sexual Addiction: Psychoanalytic Concepts and the

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisVamık D. Volkan recounts the story of Judy, a woman attempting to solve her early life deprivations through non-chemical addiction. He provides an understanding of the psychology behind such an addiction and also illustrates pertinent therapeutic concepts and issues which arose in Judy’s case. These include built-in transference, twinning, interpretation, dreams, hoarding, acting out, and therapeutic play. By paying attention to such things, it is possible to gain a greater understanding of the internal worlds of patients with preoedipal deprivations, conflicts, and fixations. For this case, Dr Volkan undertook the role of supervisor to an analyst in training. The topics of the psychoanalytic supervisor–supervisee relationship and the supervisor’s emotional reactions toward the patient, whom the supervisor never meets, are rather ignored in the psychoanalytic literature. This book gives an open and frank overview of the relationship, reporting not only what was said but also what lay behind the words. Written in Dr Volkan’s characteristically accessible style, this book will be enjoyed equally by those under supervision as those providing it, and provides an excellent overview of work with addiction.Trade Review‘The author’s approach and style result in a clear explanation of the key points while maintaining interest for the reader. This is not a dry read and is best suited to reading from cover to cover. […] This is an enjoyable read and a good starting point to delve deeper into the concepts offered within. I found Volkan’s book to be a good addition to my library.’ -- Beverly Neeson, student member of BACP, ‘Therapy Today’ March 2022'In his latest book, Vamik Volkan, esteemed psychoanalyst, scholar and prolific author, takes up the phenomenon of sexually compulsive behaviour [...] The story is one that describes the layered, at times daunting, analytic journey of Judy, Dr Rowan and Volkan, and reminds us of the power of analytic treatment and its usefulness with some of the most complicated and entrenched repetitive behaviours and destructive patterns.' -- Drew Tillotson, The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 103:2, 2022Table of ContentsAbout the author About this book Chapter 1 A “hunter” of men Chapter 2 Psychoanalytic perspectives on addictions Chapter 3 Built-in transference Chapter 4 Twinning Chapter 5 Judy’s analysis begins: Establishing a psychoanalytic foundation and linking interpretations Chapter 6 The first dream and Judy’s first year of analysis Chapter 7 Animals, birds, fish, or insects “on the couch” Chapter 8 Judy’s dog Chapter 9 Analysands’ actions Chapter 10 Therapeutic play Chapter 11 Therapeutic neutrality and countertransference Chapter 12 Reaching P and renovating a new house Chapter 13 Finding R Chapter 14 What happened to Judy after I stopped working with Dr. Rowan? References Index

    1 in stock

    £17.99

  • Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in China: Volume

    Karnac Books Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in China: Volume

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisVolume 2 of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in China continues the tradition began with Volume 1 of featuring cultural issues that confront analysts and therapists as they apply psychoanalytic thinking to their work with Chinese patients and students. Therapy and work with institutions are embedded in the civilisation, so the issues facing China and its people confront those who conduct therapy, consultation, and training there. This issue focuses on a wide-ranging view of cultural issues that underlie the work of psychoanalytic therapy, and that should equally inform training for that work. Just as the mental health needs of China are enormous, the obstacles to real cultural understanding are formidable. Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in China aims to aid both the educator and the practitioner in their efforts to bridge cultural gaps by deepening understanding of Chinese culture and mentality, and by applying that evolving understanding to therapeutic, consultative, and educational work.Table of ContentsEDITORIAL INTRODUCTION David E. Scharff ARTICLES Xie Yi Painting: A Chinese Cultural Therapy Richard Wu A Contribution to the Psychodynamics of Tolerance Tomas Plänkers Psychoanalysis and the Understanding of Chinese Life Experience Alf Gerlach Creativity and Transformation of the Psyche: Expressive Image Therapy Cai Chenghou A Commentary on Cai Chenghou’s “Creativity and Transformation of the Psyche” Marta Tibaldi What are the Characteristics and Concerns of High and Low Raters of Psychodynamic Treatment to Chinese Students Over VCON? Robert M. Gordon, Jane Tune, and Xiubing Wang Mother, Infant, and Woman’s Identity Jun Tong Interview of Sverre Varvin Jia Xiao-Ming BOOK REVIEWS Book Essay: A Bridge for Introducing Psychoanalysis to China. Five Concepts Proposed to Psychoanalysis by François Jullien Reviewed by Almatea Usuelli Evil Hours: A Biography of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder by David J. Morris Reviewed by Sverre Varvin When the Sun Bursts: The Enigma of Schizophrenia by Christopher Bollas Reviewed by Ronald Abramson THEATRE REVIEW Chimerica by Lucy Kirkwood Reviewed by David Scharff

    1 in stock

    £23.74

  • Springer Nature Switzerland AG Psychoanalysis, Politics and the Postmodern University

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisCritical theory draws on Marxism, psychoanalysis, postmodern and poststructuralist theorists. Marxism and psychoanalysis are rooted in the Enlightenment project, while postmodernism and poststructuralism are more indebted to Nietzsche, whose philosophy is rooted in anti-Enlightenment ideas and ideals. Marxism and psychoanalysis contributed mightily to our understanding of fascism and authoritarianism, but were distorted and disfigured by authoritarian tendencies and practices in turn. This book, written for clinicians and social scientists, explores these overarching themes, focusing on the reception of Freud in America, the authoritarian personality and American politics, Lacan’s “return to Freud,” Jordan Peterson and the Crisis of the Liberal Arts, and the anti-psychiatry movement. Trade Review“Burston’s book is an outstanding work of scholarship in which he favourably reviews Wilhelm Reich and Erich Fromm’s contention that ‘sadomasochism and authoritarianism are not confined to the extreme Right … . Burston endorses the mode of rational authority needed by democratic entities, which is the one that promotes competence and mutual respect.” (Ann Casement, Journal of Analytical Psychology, Vol. 66 (1), 2021)Table of ContentsChapter One: Critical Theory and the Problem of AuthorityChapter Two: Freud and America: The Golden Age, the Freud Wars and BeyondChapter Three: Jacques Lacan and Louis Althusser: Return to Freud? Chapter Four: Of Two Minds: Language and the Unconscious in Freud, Stern and McGilchrist Chapter Five: Trump, Authoritarianism & the End of American DemocracyChapter Six: Nietzsche, Postmodernism and the Hermeneutics of SuspicionChapter Seven: Jordan Peterson and the Postmodern UniversityChapter Eight: Anti-Psychiatry: The End of the Road?

    15 in stock

    £66.49

  • Springer Nature Switzerland AG The Cinematic Superhero as Social Practice

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book analyzes the cinematic superhero as social practice. The study’s critical context brings together psychoanalysis and restorative and reflective nostalgia as a way of understanding the ideological function of superhero fantasy. It explores the origins of cinematic superhero fantasy from antecedents in myth and religion, to twentieth-century comic book, to the cinematic breakthrough with Superman (1978). The authors then focus on Spider-Man as reflective response to Superman’s restorative nostalgia, and read MCU’s overarching narrative from Iron Man to End Game in terms of the concurrent social, political, and environmental conditions as a world in crisis. Zornado and Reilly take up Wonder Woman and Black Panther as self-conscious attempts to reflect on gender and race in restorative superhero fantasy, and explore Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy as a meditation on the need for authoritarian fascism. The book concludes with Logan, Wonder Woman 1984, and Amazon Prime’s The Boys as distinctly reflective fantasy narratives critical of the superhero fantasy phenomenon.Table of Contents1. Chapter One: Introduction: A Plague of Superheroes2. Chapter Two: The Superhero with a Thousand Faces 3. Chapter Three: Fantasy and the Working-Class Superhero 4. Chapter Four: Fantasies of the Anthropocene 5. Chapter Five: The Cinematic Superhero as Other 6. Chapter Six: Superhero Fantasy in Crisis 7. Chapter Seven: Conclusion: Destroy All Monsters!

    15 in stock

    £85.49

  • Lacan  Architecture

    Palgrave Macmillan Lacan Architecture

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis1. Introduction - John Shannon Hendrix and Francesco Proto.- 2. Adam's House on Earth: Architectural and Libidinal Tensions in Lars von Trier's The House That Jack Built - Angie Voela.- 3. The Architect in the Clinic of Obsessional Neurosis: From Anamorphosis to Artificial Intelligence - Tim Martin.- 4. The Automatic Writing of the City: Psychosis and Junkspace - Francesco Proto.- 5. Concentricity of Laws of Form - Don Kunze.- 6. My Neighbour My Self in the Ethics of Architecture and Psychoanalysis - Lorens Holm.- 7. Lacan's Thing with Architecture: Rimming the Void / Petrifying Pain - Andrew Payne.- 8. A Subjectless Architecture - John Shannon Hendrix.- 9. Theorizing Beyond Joan Copjec's The Strut of Vision - Don Kunze.

    1 in stock

    £134.99

  • Recent Progress in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Vol.2

    Springer Verlag, Japan Recent Progress in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Vol.2

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn 1998 the birth rate in Japan fell to an unprecedented 1.39. Among the possible causative factors are a growing preference among women to remain unmarried, an increase in the mean age at marriage, and a rise in the number of women who continue working after marriage. In contrast to the decreasing number of children in Japan - or perhaps as a result- there has been an increase of such dysfunctional phenomena as violence at home and in schools, bullying, truancy, and eating disorders among adolescents. These and other issues are among the topics considered by the contributors to Recent Progress in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Vol. 2, edited under the auspices of the Japanese Society of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. The volume presents a broad-ranging view of recent progress in the rapidly developing field of child and adolescent psychiatry, providing a valuable resource for practitioners, researchers and students of psychiatry and clinical psychology.Table of ContentsLess Severe Cases of Setback-type autism.- Autism and Affective Disorders.- Childhood Depression and the Modified Stroop Test.- Clinical Study on Emotional Development in Pre-adolescence and Its Disorders.- Cerebral MRI Findings in Childhood-onset Schizophrenia.- The Relationship Between Child and Adolescent Neurotic Symptoms and Their Age.- Recovery Process of Pubertatsmagersucht, or Anorexia Nervosa.- Social Activities of Patients with Anorexia Nervosa.- Premorbid Personality Traits and Psychodynamics in Children with Anorexia Nervosa.- A Child Case Study of Acute Idiopathic Pandysautonomia with Eating Disorders.- The Morita Therapeutic Approach Used With School Refusal Subjects Having Somatic Symptoms.- Clinical Study of Mysophobias in Adolescents.- Therapeutic Approaches to Visual and/or Auditory Disorders in Children.- A Clinical Study of Family Violence.- A Compilation of Data from the Department of Psychiatry.- Trouble Among Children on Residential Treatment.- Child and Adolescent Mental Health in Modern-Day.- The Questionnaire Study of the Imaginary Companion.- Surveys on the Pregraduate and Postgraduate Education on Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

    1 in stock

    £80.99

  • Brill Psychoanalysis in French and Francophone Literature and Film

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    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    1 in stock

    £75.81

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