Psychoanalytical and Freudian psychology Books

3782 products


  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Clinical Lessons on Life and Madness

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe author of Clinical Lessons on Life and Madness: Dostoevsky's Characters draws on Dostoevsky''s universe to illuminate psychoanalytic theory and practice. Using Dostoevsky's characters as case studies, the author discusses the various psychoanalytic concepts they embody, and shows how these insights can be applied to therapeutic understanding. By considering the people who populate Dostoevsky's world as personifying a whole spectrum of human possibilities and modes of relation, Heitor O''Dwyer de Macedo's discussion of the characters including those from Notes from Underground, Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov allows him to explore fundamental issues constitutive of clinical practice, such as trauma, fantasy, perversion and madness. Clinical Lessons on Life and Madness will provide an important resource for psychoanalysts with an interest in literature, as well as students of literature seeking a psycTrade ReviewLocated in the space between the raw reality of treating psychosis and Dostoevsky’s powerful work, this book takes us to the intersection of unnamable anguish where the characters encounter the unconscious. Determined to delve into the spheres that Freud, focused on neurosis, left unexplored - trauma and madness - Heitor O’Dwyer de Macedo, with his love of literature and the acute perception of an exceptional clinician, takes us across zones filled with the cumbersome hatred of the dead, to show us that these zones can open unto love and desire. This book is essential for clinical practice, and will delight all those who find the unconscious endlessly fascinating. Anna Angelopoulos, psychoanalyst, anthropologist, President of the Fédération des Ateliers de Psychanalyse (Federation of Psychoanalytic Workshops), Paris; renowned researcher in the oral tradition of storytelling. In this book, psychoanalyst Heitor O’Dwyer de Macedo shows us that Dostoevsky, the brilliant clinician, describes psychic processes that Freud would only formulate decades later. In simple language, de Macedo also points out that Dostoevsky’s novels deal essentially with the desire to establish vibrant relationships with others, without letting ideology replace lost religion. Michel Eltchaninoff, philosopher, editor in chief of Philosophie MagazineWith his considerable clinical experience and vast knowledge of literature, the author ponders the mysteries of the human soul as they are revealed by Dostoevsky. Psychoanalysis and literature are both enriched as a result. We have here what Sartre would call the work of a master. Ronaldo Lima Lins, writer, professor emeritus of literature at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro Table of ContentsTable of ContentsPreambleChapter 1 Notes from UndergroundChapter 2 Crime and PunishmentChapter 3 The DoubleChapter 4 The IdiotChapter 5 DemonsChapter 6 The Brothers Karamazov Chapter 7 Women in Dostoyevsky’s FictionChapter 8 The Grand InquisitorReferences

    15 in stock

    £35.14

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd A Clinicians Guide to Foundational Story

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisA Clinician''s Guide to Foundational Story Psychotherapy draws together a range of theories and models to examine the use of narrative psychotherapy in clinical practice.Illustrated with case examples and biographical vignettes, the book outlines the importance of foundational and life stories in treatment and delineates new techniques for co-assessing and changing stories. A wealth of concrete tools are included, such as the Foundational Story Interview and Family of Origin Map, as well as diagram templates and questionnaires for use during clinical sessions.Integrating theory and practical applications, A Clinician''s Guide to Foundational Story Psychotherapy introduces a range of therapeutic options rooted in a narrative context and is a valuable resource for practicing and student psychotherapists. Trade Review"Dr. Hugh Marr has given us a masterpiece of synthesis and explication of the power of story across the spectrum of psychotherapy models. He provides a major expansion of narrative theory. From the role of story in the theories of Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, Michael White, and other innovators to the more recent 21st century developers of new ideas in psychotherapy, this book has it all. Dr. Marr provides us with a fine-grained analysis of the elements of a complete story, such as the witness, roles, themes, and plots, and gives each of these a chapter of its own, including an explanation of how changes in each element change the patient’s life. There is much more. The book concludes with guides for therapists to increase the efficacy of their own work through the explicit recognition of the power of story in psychotherapeutic healing. Outstanding!" — Jay Noricks, PhD, psychotherapist and author of Healing Amelia and Parts Psychology "Dr. Marr’s book is remarkable. He shows us that although we cannot literally change the failures and afflictions of the past, we can change the way we think about them. In fact, we can see how they have helped create the person we have become and can help us attain what C. G. Jung called amor fate—namely, to love who we have become." — Julie Bondanza, PhD, Jungian analyst and former Training Director of Analytic Training for the New York C. G. Jung Institute"A Clinician’s Guide to Foundational Story Psychotherapy is a breakthrough guide, combining a comprehensive understanding of narrative and its importance in human life with strategies for utilizing this knowledge in finding the client’s overarching and subtheme stories, and, when necessary, reframing them to support a richer and more fulfilling life. Dr. Marr’s book is certain to become one of the classics in psychotherapy." — Carol Pearson, PhD, author of Persephone Rising: Awakening the Hero Within; coauthor with Dr. Marr of the PMAI assessment and What Story Are You Living?; past Provost and President of Pacifica Graduate Institute"The field of psychotherapy needs a comprehensive book like this that includes both theory and practical applications. I have yet to find a book that offers such a clear and foundational overview in its approach to narrative psychotherapy and includes so many creative tools and techniques. I think clinicians will use the book to become acquainted with the narrative approach to psychotherapy, enhance their existing understanding, and learn new techniques for applying narrative in clinical practice. I look forward to further enhancing my existing clinical skills and story-based writing exercises." — Kim Schneiderman, LCSW, psychotherapist and author of Step Out of Your Story: Writing Exercises to Reframe and Transform Your Life"Master clinician and trauma teacher Dr. Hugh Marr has created a gem that will be a treasure to all healers. It is about life stories that may limit or empower us. Like authoring a coherent book, we each need to make explicit, clarify, edit, and complete the story of our lives to find meaning, order, perspective, healing, and happiness. Marr explains how to do this with wisdom, warmth, wit, and many clear, practical explanations. This is a brilliant and fascinating read, one that I’ll keep and reread." — Glenn R. Schiraldi, PhD, Lt. Colonel (Ret.), University of Maryland School of Public Health (Ret.); author of The Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Sourcebook, The Resilience Workbook, and The Self-Esteem Workbook"Dr. Hugh Marr has given us a masterpiece of synthesis and explication of the power of story across the spectrum of psychotherapy models. He provides a major expansion of narrative theory. From the role of story in the theories of Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, Michael White, and other innovators to the more recent 21st century developers of new ideas in psychotherapy, this book has it all. Dr. Marr provides us with a fine-grained analysis of the elements of a complete story, such as the witness, roles, themes, and plots, and gives each of these a chapter of its own, including an explanation of how changes in each element change the patient’s life. There is much more. The book concludes with guides for therapists to increase the efficacy of their own work through the explicit recognition of the power of story in psychotherapeutic healing. Outstanding!" — Jay Noricks, PhD, psychotherapist and author of Healing Amelia and Parts Psychology "Dr. Marr’s book is remarkable. He shows us that although we cannot literally change the failures and afflictions of the past, we can change the way we think about them. In fact, we can see how they have helped create the person we have become and can help us attain what C. G. Jung called amor fate—namely, to love who we have become." — Julie Bondanza, PhD, Jungian analyst and former training director of analytic training for the New York C. G. Jung Institute"A Clinician’s Guide to Foundational Story Psychotherapy is a breakthrough guide, combining a comprehensive understanding of narrative and its importance in human life with strategies for utilizing this knowledge in finding the client’s overarching and subtheme stories, and, when necessary, reframing them to support a richer and more fulfilling life. Dr. Marr’s book is certain to become one of the classics in psychotherapy." — Carol Pearson, PhD, author of Persephone Rising: Awakening the Hero Within; coauthor with Dr. Marr of the PMAI assessment and What Story Are You Living?; past provost and president of Pacifica Graduate Institute"The field of psychotherapy needs a comprehensive book like this that includes both theory and practical applications. I have yet to find a book that offers such a clear and foundational overview in its approach to narrative psychotherapy and includes so many creative tools and techniques. I think clinicians will use the book to become acquainted with the narrative approach to psychotherapy, enhance their existing understanding, and learn new techniques for applying narrative in clinical practice. I look forward to further enhancing my existing clinical skills and story-based writing exercises." — Kim Schneiderman, LCSW, psychotherapist and author of Step Out of Your Story: Writing Exercises to Reframe and Transform Your Life"Master clinician and trauma teacher Dr. Hugh Marr has created a gem that will be a treasure to all healers. It is about life stories that may limit or empower us. Like authoring a coherent book, we each need to make explicit, clarify, edit, and complete the story of our lives to find meaning, order, perspective, healing, and happiness. Marr explains how to do this with wisdom, warmth, wit, and many clear, practical explanations. This is a brilliant and fascinating read, one that I’ll keep and reread." — Glenn R. Schiraldi, PhD, Lt. Colonel (Ret.), University of Maryland School of Public Health (Ret.); author of The Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Sourcebook, The Resilience Workbook, and The Self-Esteem WorkbookTable of ContentsList of FiguresList of TablesAcknowledgements: A Professional Journey StoryPrefaceIntroductionPart 1 - The Shoulders of Giants 1. Major Background Theorists Part 2 - The Aspects of Story and the Foundational Story Model2. The Aspects of Story 3. The Foundational Story Model 4. Foundational Stories: Russian Dolls and Magic Mirrors Part 3 - Life and Foundational Story Assessment 5. Gathering Stories 6.Understanding Foundational Stories 7. Assessing the Impact of History and Context: The Foundational Story Interview and Family of Origin Mapping 8. The Seminal Importance of Roles 9. Assessing the Life Story Plot and Characters: Plot Diagramming And Character (or Ego State) Mapping Part 4 - Changing Foundational and Life Stories 10. Introduction and Sources of Change 11. Changing Context: Story Receiving and Storytelling 12. Helping Transform Characters 13. Changing Plot 14. Thematic Change 15. Transforming the Moral and the Whole Story I 16.Transforming the Moral and the Whole Story II: Foundational Storyboarding Part 5 - Trauma and the Life Story 17. From Fat Farm to Child Abuse 18. The Trauma Story: Holes, Shards, and Morals 19. A Trauma Treatment Primer: Phases of Trauma Treatment Part 6 - Listening to Your Own Story20. Working With Yourself 21. Growing as a Therapist Part 7 - Conclusion: Weaving it Together 22. Without and Beyond Story 23. Integrating a Storied View With Your Own Theory AppendicesAppendix I: The Foundational Story Interview TemplateAppendixII: Foundational Story Diagram FormAppendix III: Family of Origin Mapping (FOOM) ProcedureAppendix IV: Trauma ListIndex

    15 in stock

    £114.00

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Emotions of Menace and Enchantment

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisEmotions of Menace and Enchantment examines four pivotal human emotions. It explores what defines these emotions, how they interact, and how they impact the experience of self-boundary. All four feelings speak to the boundary around the self, to whether we stiffen that boundary, relax it or worry about its fraying. Psychoanalysis has looked closely at conflicts that human beings experience, but has paid relatively less attention to the specific emotions through which conflict is known and managed. The disgust emotion is unique in operating like a gatekeeper that manages what approaches us closely. Disgust appears prominently in our relationship with the physical world, but surprisingly, is just as common in the world of politics. It moves people to action, including deeds of great violence. Horror occurs when we feel invaded and altered by something that leads to profound insecurity. Human beings behaving inhumanly is one common source of horror.&nbspTrade Review"Susan Beth Miller skillfully portrays emotions as fluid, multifaceted (experiential, physiological, cognitive, conscious, unconscious), sometimes contradictory, and intrinsically relational. Our feelings reflect appraisals of the world and they reconfigure our selves accordingly, prompting us toward receptive engagement or guarded defensiveness. To her research, Miller brings the knowledge and sensitivity of a sophisticated psychoanalytic clinician, supplemented with insights from anthropology, philosophy, psychology, and literature. Her impressive meditation on emotion will stimulate valuable thoughts in readers, intensifying and enriching their interest in, and understanding of, the affective spectra they encounter in themselves, their patients, and others."-Brent Willock, author of Comparative-Integrative Psychoanalysis, is Founding President, Toronto Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis.Table of ContentsChapter 1: Entering the World of Emotion; Chapter 2: The Gatekeeper Emotion: Disgust; Chapter 3: The Breakdown Emotion: Horror; Chapter 4: The Imbibing Emotion: Awe; Chapter 5: The Fixed Eye of Fascination; Concluding Comments

    15 in stock

    £39.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Emotion Affective Practices and the Past in the

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisEmotion, Affective Practices, and the Past in the Present is a response to debates in the humanities and social sciences about the use of emotion. This timely and unique book explores the ways emotion is embroiled and used in contemporary engagements with the past, particularly in contexts such as heritage sites, museums, commemorations, political rhetoric and ideology, debates over issues of social memory, and touristic uses of heritage sites. Including contributions from academics and practitioners in a range of countries, the book reviews significant and conflicting academic debates on the nature and expression of affect and emotion. As a whole, the book makes an argument for a pragmatic understanding of affect and, in doing so, outlines Wetherell's concept of affective practice, a concept utilised in most of the chapters in this book. Since debates about affect and emotion can often be confusing and abstract, the book aims to clarify these debates andTrade Review'Emotion, Affective Practices, and the Past in the Present is a welcome addition to the literature about emotion and affect in heritage studies. The contributors set out to deconstruct theoretically how individuals respond when they encounter heritage in its various manifestations, and how they are affected and what they feel. Particularly helpful are those chapters which rely on visitor studies and move beyond the academy into the field to explore how people engage with the past and relate it to the present in an emotional and affective manner. Thus this book provides students and academics alike with useful insights into the ways in which the turn to emotion has engaged scholars of critical heritage studies, and it will be of use to all who wish to develop a greater understanding of heritage and its impact on individuals and society in general.'Sheila Watson, University of Leicester, UK'The objective of this book is to bring forward emotion and affectivity in museum and heritage institutions and studies. As a result, this collected edition is not only timely, it also covers an essential theme in Heritage Studies that has been largely left aside or remains, at best, an implicit element in many professional and academic works. Simply put, this is a collected edition that should be influential for years to come.'Jonathan Paquette, University of Ottawa, USATable of Contents1. Introduction: affective heritage practices Margaret Wetherell, Laurajane Smith, and Gary CampbellPart I: Commemoration and remembering 2. Labour of love and devotion? The search for the lost soldiers of Russia Johanna Dahlin3. Troubling heritage: intimate pasts and public memories at Derry/Londonderry’s ‘temple’Margo Shea4. Commemoration, affective practice, and the difficult histories of war Amy McKernan and Julie McLeod5. Constructing heritage through subjectivity: Museum of Broken Relationships Željka Miklošević and Darko Babić6. The Battle of Orgreave (1984) Toby JuliffPart II: Belonging and exclusion7. Apologising for past wrongs: emotion-reason rhetoric in political discourse Martha Augoustinos, Brianne Hastie and Peta Callaghan8. Experiencing mixed emotions in the museum: empathy, affect, and memory in visitors’ responses to histories of migration Rhiannon Mason, Katherine Lloyd, Areti Galani and Joanne Sayner9. Coming undone: protocols of emotion in Canadian human rights museology Jennifer Claire Robinson10. Touring the post-conflict city: negotiating affects during Belfast’s black cab mural tours Katie Markham11.. Performing affection, constructing heritage? Civil and political mobilisations around the Ottoman legacy in Bulgaria Ivo Strahilov and Slavka KarakushevaPart III: Learning, teaching and engaging12. Understanding the emotional regimes of reconciliation in engagements with ‘difficult’ heritage Michalinos Zembylas13. Affective practices of learning at the museum: children’s critical encounters with the past Dianne Mulcahy and Andrea Witcomb14. White guilt and shame: students’ emotional reactions to digital stories of race in a South African classroom Daniela Gachago, Vivienne Bozalek and Dick Ng’ambi15. Settler-Indigenous relationships and the emotional regime of empathy in Australian history school textbooks in times of reconciliation Angelique Stastny16. ‘Head and heart’ responses to treaty education in Aotearoa New Zealand: feeling the timeline of colonisation Ingrid Huygens17. Raw emotion: the Living Memory module at three sites of practice Celmara Pocock, Marion Stell and Geraldine MateIndex

    15 in stock

    £37.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Selfexamination in Psychoanalysis and

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisSelf-examination in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy provides open and intimate accounts of the experience of being in psychotherapy. The internal life of the therapist is as much at the heart of the stories told as those of the clients. William F. Cornell here writes in a more personal and literary voice, avoiding as much as possible, the dense theoretical language that often typifies analytic writing. Central to the thesis elaborated in this book is that of how the therapist's own personal history and unconscious motivations can deepen or distort the therapist's understanding of the client. One chapter is devoted to the frank discussion of the author's work with a client that was not only unhelpful but in fact harmful. Cornell emphasizes the capacity to call one's self into question as a fundamental outcome of psychotherapy and psychoanalysis. Attention is paid to the conscious and unconscious forces that create profound dynamic tensions between the enliveniTrade Review"This book conveys in a personal voice the emotional experience of being a psychotherapist or a psychoanalyst. Psychoanalysis has mainly been a study of how the patient’s personal history unconsciously shapes the therapeutic relationship over the course of the treatment. Cornell takes another step in focusing on the parallel influence of the therapist’s history within the therapeutic process. Enriching the conceptualization of counter-transference, he stresses the importance of the therapist’s willingness to call their own thoughts and feeling into question in the service of the patient."-Jean-Michel Quinodoz"The many vignettes in this unique and deeply affecting book are personal stories, not illustrations of ideas. The book rides the line between psychoanalysis and psychotherapy, on one hand, and fiction, on the other. For many of us, that is an ideal. It is for me. Cornell’s vital, committed, warm, and funny presence is thoroughly woven into the mix. We learn about him and his own life, but always in the service of the larger purposes of his book. The wisdom and depth of these stories will move you and contribute to your work. What more can we ask?"-Donnel Stern, Ph.D. "Once in a very rare while, a professional book comes along that not only challenges readers intellectually, but touches them emotionally as well. William Cornell knows that it is only by examining the ways in which two vulnerable human beings--therapist and patient-- mutually impact each other that we can we truly understand how psychoanalytic therapy leads to change and growth. In this deeply personal set of essays, the author invites us to accompany him into the treatment room, where he provides a rare and treasured glimpse into the heart and mind of a gifted psychotherapist. This will be a compelling read for therapists at all levels of experience as well as anyone with an interest in what it means to endure and transcend personal struggle."-Steven Kuchuck, DSW, Editor, Clinical Implications of the Psychoanalyst’s Subjectivity: When the Personal Becomes Professional; President, International Association for Relational Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy"This book conveys in a personal voice the emotional experience of being a psychotherapist or a psychoanalyst. Psychoanalysis has mainly been a study of how the patient’s personal history unconsciously shapes the therapeutic relationship over the course of the treatment. Cornell takes another step in focusing on the parallel influence of the therapist’s history within the therapeutic process. Enriching the conceptualization of counter-transference, he stresses the importance of the therapist’s willingness to call their own thoughts and feeling into question in the service of the patient."-Jean-Michel Quinodoz"The many vignettes in this unique and deeply affecting book are personal stories, not illustrations of ideas. The book rides the line between psychoanalysis and psychotherapy, on one hand, and fiction, on the other. For many of us, that is an ideal. It is for me. Cornell’s vital, committed, warm, and funny presence is thoroughly woven into the mix. We learn about him and his own life, but always in the service of the larger purposes of his book. The wisdom and depth of these stories will move you and contribute to your work. What more can we ask?"-Donnel Stern, Ph.D. "Once in a very rare while, a professional book comes along that not only challenges readers intellectually, but touches them emotionally as well. William Cornell knows that it is only by examining the ways in which two vulnerable human beings--therapist and patient-- mutually impact each other that we can we truly understand how psychoanalytic therapy leads to change and growth. In this deeply personal set of essays, the author invites us to accompany him into the treatment room, where he provides a rare and treasured glimpse into the heart and mind of a gifted psychotherapist. This will be a compelling read for therapists at all levels of experience as well as anyone with an interest in what it means to endure and transcend personal struggle."-Steven Kuchuck, DSW, Editor, Clinical Implications of the Psychoanalyst’s Subjectivity: When the Personal Becomes Professional; President, International Association for Relational Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy Table of ContentsChapter 1: What Am I Getting Myself Into?Chapter 2: Stumbling in the shadowsChapter 3: Calling one’s self into questionChapter 4: FailureChapter 5: Finding a mind of one’s ownChapter 6: The Therapist’s Body at WorkChapter 7: The Disappeared SelfChapter 8: HauntedChapter 9: When Life and Death Hold HandsChapter 10: Staying alive until the end

    15 in stock

    £34.19

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Intercultural Therapy

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisIntercultural Therapy: Challenges, Insights and Developments examines the impact of the work of the Nafsiyat Intercultural Therapy Centre in North London, which focused on providing free, psychodynamic therapy. Set up by Jafar Kareem, the centre was the first psychotherapy service with the specific task of offering psychodynamic psychotherapy to Britain's Black and ethnic minority population. The editors of this book have invited a number of Nafsiyat therapists and colleagues to give their view on what has changed, or not changed, in regard to the integration of intercultural issues into mainstream therapy.Intercultural Therapy will be of interest to all psychotherapists working in multicultural practices, as well as practitioners and social workers.Table of ContentsIntroduction: process and development in intercultural psychotherapyRoland Littlewood and Baffour Ababio1 Intercultural therapy and neoliberalismInga-Britt Krause 2 Who’s being assessed? Post modernism and intercultural therapy assessments: a synergetic processh.Oye Agoro3 Not yet at home: an exploration of aural and verbal passing amongst African migrants in BritainBaffour Ababio4 Group psychotherapy with Turkish-speaking women at Nafsiyat: migration, gender and ethnic differences as catalysts to growth in the psychodynamic groupDilek Güngör5 Finding our voice across the Black/white divide: race issues in therapyEugene Ellis6 Racism in the room: internal working model of the 'non-white' introjectDeri Hughes7 Intercultural psychotherapy, intracultural psychotherapy, or just good psychotherapy?Peter Cockersell8 Postcolonialism and countertransference in two cases of the sexual abuse of women by doctorsRoland Littlewood9 Inferiorisation: approaching a stigmatising reality in therapyAntony Sigalas10 Face to face: psychotherapy in black and whiteCharles Brown11 Embodied intercultural groundCarmen Joanne Ablack12 Intercultural psychoanalytic psychotherapy and generationally transmitted traumaLennox K. Thomas13 Beyond the famil(y)ar: the construct of the self outside the dyad – intercultural therapy as an opportunity to explore the social selfFrancesca Zanatta14 The challenge of racism in clinical supervisionIsha Mckenzie-Mavinga

    15 in stock

    £35.14

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Couple

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Couple: A pluridisciplinary story asks two questions and endeavours to answer them: What is the couple? And what story are we talking about? Éric Smadja presents his view of the couple as a composite, sexual-bodily, socio-cultural and psychic living reality in diverse and variable interrelationships, unfolding within a complex temporality. Ambivalently invested in by each partner, the couple is structurally and dynamically as conflictual as it is critical. Smadja sees the couple as situated at the intersection of several histories: socio-cultural; epistemological (the construction of this object of knowledge and of psychoanalytic treatment); natural (that of the cycle of conjugal life marked out by critical and mutative stages); and therapeutic (that of the suffering couple that will consult a specialist and undergo psychoanalytic therapy). The Couple: A pluridisciplinary story follows the narrative division of these histories following a pluri- aTable of ContentsIntroduction. The Couple's Historical and Socio-Cultural Envelope. Some Historical Points of Reference, Or the Construction of an Object of Knowledge and of Psychoanalytic Treatment. About Some Psychic Components Present within the Couple. Sketching a ‘Natural’ History of a Couple. Couple Work. The Suffering Couple, Their Request for a Consultation and the Psychoanalytic Work. Conclusion.

    15 in stock

    £40.84

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Melanie Klein

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisMelanie Klein: The Basics provides an accessible and concise introduction to the life and work of Melanie Klein, whose discoveries advanced those of Freud and other analysts, deepening our insight into the unconscious domain of psychology in human beings. Klein began her work by developing a method of psychoanalysis for children, who suffer from anxiety and other, often unrecognised, conflicts, which enabled understanding of those crucial early steps in the development of human mind and identity. Although she initiated one strand of clinical and theoretical developments, many of her discoveries are well-regarded by other schools of psychoanalysis.The book contains four parts, as well as further reading suggestions and a helpful glossary of key terms. Part I introduces Melanie Klein in the context of her life, her early interest in psychoanalysis and her first discoveries; Part II takes up the development of her technique of child analysis and discussTrade Review"If you are looking for a clear and concise introduction to Melanie Klein, this book is for you. It will also be for anyone who wants a succinct overview of Melanie Klein’s contribution to psychoanalysis and her framework of concepts."-In Mind, The Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation TrustTable of ContentsINTRODUCTIONPART 1 – New method, new factsChapter 1 – Who was she?Chapter 2 – Where did she start?Chapter 3 – Establishing the fundamentals of psychoanalysisChapter 4 – What is psychic reality?Chapter 5 – An insight into children? Chapter 6 – New discoveries, who says?Conclusions to PART 1PART 2 – The earliest development – Starting at birth Chapter 7 – Earlier mechanisms – In and outChapter 8 – Experiences and phantasiesChapter 9 – Who are you? – Ego boundaryChapter 10 – Depressed?Chapter 11 – Repairing and caringConclusions to PART 2 PART 3 – How crazy can you get?Chapter 12 -- Splitting of the ego – What destabilises the mind? Chapter 13 -- Annihilation – who's afraid of going to pieces? Chapter 14 -- Paranoid-schizoid positionChapter 15 -- Projective identification; he’s not all thereChapter 16 -- The worst of all vices – envyChapter 17 -- Psychotic reality?Conclusion to PART 3Part 4 – Beyond basics – TruthChapter 18 – Pathological organisations – Who's in the Mafia?Chapter 19 – ContainmentChapter 20 – Thoughts find a thinkerChapter 21 - How does it all apply? Conclusion to PART 4ReferencesGLOSSARY

    15 in stock

    £24.51

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Ludwig Klages and the Philosophy of Life

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book provides a unique overview of and introduction to the work of the German psychologist and philosopher Ludwig Klages (1872-1956), an astonishing figure in the history of German ideas. Central to intellectual life in turn-of-the-century Munich, he went on to establish a reputation for himself as an original and provocative thinker. Nowadays he is often overlooked, partly because of the absence of an accessible and authoritative introduction to his thought; this volume offers just such a point of entry. With an emphasis on applicability and utility, Paul Bishop reinvigorates the discourse surrounding Klages, providing a neutral and compact account of his intellectual development and his impact on psychology and philosophy.Part 1 offers an overview of Klages's life, visiting the major stations of his intellectual development. Part 2 examines in turn nine major conceptual tools' found in Klages's extensive writings, aiming to clarify Klages's terminology, to demysTrade Review‘Bishop’s skill as a historian shines here, for the level of detail he provides is truly exceptional, especially insofar as it concerns Klages’s intellectual development’ (Configurations)‘Beautiful and accessible … For anyone who seriously studies nineteenth and twentieth-century continental philosophy today, this introduction to Klages is indispensable’ (British Journal for the History of Philosophy)‘With this concise and clearly-written book, [Bishop] ingeniously succeeds in opening a door and offering access to an important, complex, and most influential ? yet almost forgotten ? thinker of the 20th century’ (International Journal of Jungian Studies)Table of ContentsCONTENTSAbbreviationsList of FiguresAcknowledgements Glossary of Klagesian TerminologyPrefacePart 1: LifePart 2: Works and Key IdeasPart 3: For Advanced Readers — Selections from KlagesFurther ReadingNotes

    15 in stock

    £133.00

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Race in Psychoanalysis

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisRace in Psychoanalysis analyzes the often-unrecognized racism in psychoanalysis by examining how the colonialist discourse of late nineteenth-century anthropology made its way into Freud's foundational texts, where it has remained and continues to exert a hidden influence. Recent racial violence, particularly in the US, has made many realize that academic and professional disciplines, as well as social and political institutions, need to be re-examined for the racial biases they may contain. Psychoanalysis is no exception.When Freud applied his insights to the history of the psyche and of civilization, he made liberal use of the anthropology of his time, which was steeped in colonial, racist thought. Although it has often been assumed that this usage was confined to his non-clinical works, this book argues that through the pivotal concept of primitivity, it fed back into his theories of the psyche and of clinical technique as well.Celia Brickman Trade Review"Celia Brickman’s masterpiece, Race In Psychoanalysis, is one of only a handful of books that I would describe as having profoundly changed the way I think about Freud and the development of psychoanalysis...Brickman’s book will remain a classic and generations of analysts will need to study it to understand and reconceptualize the most fundamental assumptions and tenets of psychoanalysis..."-from the foreword by Lewis Aron, Ph.D., Director, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis."Brickman’s remarkably innovative work turns the lens of post-colonial theory on the unconscious racial assumptions of psychoanalysis, offering a new and radical take on the central tension in Freud’s thoughts between valorizing and undermining the idea of the "civilized" world. Erudite, lucid and compelling, Race in Psychoanalysis is a timely argument for transforming psychoanalysis into a genuinely critical theory of the repudiation of the Other. It should be read by all students of psychoanalysis as well as everyone interested in the history of psychoanalysis and its contribution to modern thought."-Jessica Benjamin, author of Beyond Doer and Done To: Recognition Theory, Intersubjectivity and the Third.""In Race in Psychoanalysis: Aboriginal Populations in the Mind, Celia Brickman illuminates the manner in which our colonialist and enslaving past continues to reverberate within the construction of psychoanalytic theory and practice. Taking a thoughtful and detailed tour through the history of Freud’s relationship with the sociopolitical forces within Europe during his time, Brickman chronicles the various iterations of the use of the darkened masses as timeless and primitive. Illuminating the way race and racialized object relations permeate our canonical texts, her perspective is a wonderful new resource to locate pathways to a multicultural, racial, and ethnically diverse discourse within theory construction and training in psychoanalysis."The pitfalls and paradoxes concerning race that are embedded within the field" become points of access for those perceived as other, not-white, and different from whiteness to become psychoanalysts. Brickman points to the lived psychodynamics of racialization as the way to further Freud’s wish that his project be for the people."-Annie Lee Jones, Ph.D., clinical psychologist/psychoanalyst, member of Black Psychoanalysts Speak."Celia Brickman’s masterpiece, Race In Psychoanalysis, is one of only a handful of books that I would describe as having profoundly changed the way I think about Freud and the development of psychoanalysis...Brickman’s book will remain a classic and generations of analysts will need to study it to understand and reconceptualize the most fundamental assumptions and tenets of psychoanalysis..."Lewis Aron, Director, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis."Brickman’s remarkably innovative work turns the lens of post-colonial theory on the unconscious racial assumptions of psychoanalysis, offering a new and radical take on the central tension in Freud’s thoughts between valorizing and undermining the idea of the "civilized" world. Erudite, lucid and compelling, Race in Psychoanalysis is a timely argument for transforming psychoanalysis into a genuinely critical theory of the repudiation of the Other. It should be read by all students of psychoanalysis as well as everyone interested in the history of psychoanalysis and its contribution to modern thought."Jessica Benjamin, author of Beyond Doer and Done To: Recognition Theory, Intersubjectivity and the Third.""In Race in Psychoanalysis: Aboriginal Populations in the Mind, Celia Brickman illuminates the manner in which our colonialist and enslaving past continues to reverberate within the construction of psychoanalytic theory and practice. Taking a thoughtful and detailed tour through the history of Freud’s relationship with the sociopolitical forces within Europe during his time, Brickman chronicles the various iterations of the use of the darkened masses as timeless and primitive. Illuminating the way race and racialized object relations permeate our canonical texts, her perspective is a wonderful new resource to locate pathways to a multicultural, racial, and ethnically diverse discourse within theory construction and training in psychoanalysis."The pitfalls and paradoxes concerning race that are embedded within the field" become points of access for those perceived as other, not-white, and different from whiteness to become psychoanalysts. Brickman points to the lived psychodynamics of racialization as the way to further Freud’s wish that his project be for the people."Annie Lee Jones, clinical psychologist/psychoanalyst, member of Black Psychoanalysts Speak."Equipped with a mastery of post-colonial theory, critical race theory, feminist critique and theories from religious studies, as well as a sophisticated understanding of psychoanalytic theory, Ms Brickman offers us a radical perspective on Freud's meta-psychological, cultural and clinical thought. Ms Brickman offers cogent summaries of Freud's writings and extrapolates numerous examples from a vast body of clinical and cultural texts demonstrating a deep familiarity with his oeuvre."Romy A. Reading is a licensed clinical psychologist specializing in individual psychological treatment for adults and adolescents. To read this review in full, please see the following: Reading, R. A. (2021) Race in psychoanalysis: aboriginal populations in the mind: by Celia Brickman, New York, Routledge, 2018, 234 pp., £25.89, ISBN: 9781138749399. International Journal of Psychoanalysis 102:642-645Table of ContentsForeword; Preface to the new edition; Acknowledgments; Introduction; 1. The figure of the primitive: a brief genealogy; 2. Psychoanalysis and the colonial imagination: evolutionary thought in Freud’s texts; 3. Race and gender, primitivity and femininity: psychologies of enthrallment; 4. Historicizing consciousness: time, history, and religion; 5. Race and primitivity in the clinical encounter; Epilogue; Bibliography; Index

    15 in stock

    £37.04

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Enigma of Desire

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Enigma of Desire: Sex, Longing and Belonging in Psychoanalysis, introduces new perspectives on desire and longing, in and outside of the analytic relationship. This exciting volume explores the known and unknown, ghosts and demons, sexuality and lust. Galit Atlas discusses the subjects of sex and desire and explores what she terms the Enigmatic and the Pragmatic aspects of sexuality, longing, female desire, sexual inhibition, pregnancy, parenthood and creativity. The author focuses on the levels of communication that take place in the most intimate settings: between mothers and their babies; between lovers; in the unconscious bond of two people in the consulting room, where two individuals sit alone in one room, looking and listening, breathing and dreaming. Atlas examines the ways in which different languages, translations and integrations focus on birth, death, sexuality, and human bonds. In The Enigma of Desire each chapter opens withTrade ReviewClinically astute and theoretically provocative, The Enigma of Desire recaptures the realm of sexuality for relational psychoanalysis. Atlas offers an illuminating, original construction of sexuality as located in the tension between enigmatic and pragmatic dimensions, deftly putting into play the binaries of known and unknown, seen and unseen, internal and external as well as oedipal and pre-oedipal experiences of the body. Charged with the passionate intensity of early maternal experience that has often been desexualized, Atlas’s complex and creative narratives bring theoretical constructs to larger life while offering clinicians a model of sensitive, nuanced work. - Jessica Benjamin, Supervisor and Faculty, New York University Postdoctoral Psychology Program in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy; author of Shadow of the Other.​In The Enigma of Desire Galit Atlas challenges us to consider not only the "pragmatic" mother and infant of infant research, but also the enigmatic mother and infant, hidden, mysterious, unknown. "… some things can be heard only from inside – not through the actual observed interaction … but rather in the enigmatic-unseen zones of the internal mind" (p. 17). The co-creation and co-regulation of desire is a topic that deserves more attention in psychoanalysis. Galit Atlas offers us an outstanding statement. - Beatrice Beebe, Ph.D. Clinical Professor of Psychology (in Psychiatry), College of Physicians & Surgeons, Columbia UniversityTable of ContentsIntroduction: Desires, Mothers, and OthersPart I. Enigmatic and Pragmatic2. Ella: The Enigma of Desire3. Ben and Leo: Excited Idiot4. Danny: Ghosts and the Maternal SkinPart II. Enigmatic Knowing5. Celine: Breaks in Unity6. Tomaz and Ron: The Enigmatic Language7. Karen: Words and Silences8. Galit: Sex, Lies, and PsychoanalysisPart III. The Unknown9. Sex and the Kitchen: The Mystery of Female Desire10. Jo, Simone, and Those We Don’t Yet Know: Three Pregnancies and Psychoanalysis11. Sophie, Sarah: Dreams, Enactments, and the Enigmatic FutureEpilogue: DeathReferences

    15 in stock

    £37.04

  • Taylor & Francis Transgender Psychoanalysis

    15 in stock

    Drawing on the authorâs clinical work with gender-variant patients, Transgender Psychoanalysis: A Lacanian Perspective on Sexual Difference argues for a depathologizing of the transgender experience, while offering an original analysis of sexual difference. We are living in a trans moment that has become the next civil rights frontier. By unfixing our notions of gender, sex, and sexual identity, challenging normativity and essentialisms, trans modalities of embodiment can help reorient psychoanalytic practice. This book addresses sexual identity and sexuality by articulating new ideas on the complex relationship of the body to the psyche, the precariousness of gender, the instability of the male/female opposition, identity construction, uncertainties about sexual choiceâin short, the conundrum of sexual difference. Transgender Psychoanalysis features explications of Lacanian psychoanalysis along with considerations on sex and gender in the form of clinical vigne

    15 in stock

    £39.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Presence of the Absent

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhere live our most cherished (or painful) memories? Where do our beloved (or dreaded) exist when departed? In the gray zone between our self and our world, they can exist as internal reminiscences for some and striking images for others; individually or collectively perceived and interacted; vividly or as tenuous presences.This book familiarizes us with six examples of individuals and families in therapy who live and interact with the presence of their absent, pivotal people in their lives who either died or disappeared, but are still there. It familiarizes us with their plight in a tender, compassionate style, describing in detail interviews and therapeutic transformations and, in several cases, follow-ups as well as echoes of those processes. It teaches us to respect those presences as well as how to help families and individuals treasure themand in many cases to let them go.Written in a vivid, intense language, The Presence of the Absent offers a marvelous insight Trade Review"It would be a mistake to pass this book over, thinking it only has relevance for family therapists; the ghosts are equally alive in all our therapy rooms." —Chris Rose, group psychotherapist, writer and Therapy Today Reviews Editor"Gripping, inspiring and poetic, this groundbreaking book is a rare combination of theory, practice and enchantment about the mysteries of grieving processes seldom addressed before. Sprinkled with fascinating and self-reflective illustrations, Sluzki’s brilliant work with traumatic losses masterfully offers creative and culturally respectful clinical practices for professionals at all levels." —Celia Jaes Falicov, PhD, clinical professor in family medicine and public health at the University of California, San Diego and author of Latino Families in Therapy."A brilliant, creative, deeply touching gem of a book—clear and simply told, but not oversimplified. Sluzki is a genius at the delicate intervention. A master therapist dealing with complex cultural disruption, traumatic loss and the presence of ghosts, he offers a remarkable challenge to himself and others to remain open to possibilities. We see him challenging cultural assumptions and behaviors in gentle and non-abrasive ways, intervening with humble and tender precision in complex clinical situations. His book is affecting, thoughtful, subtle and wise." —Dr. Monica McGoldrick, MSW, PhD (hc), director, Multicultural Family Institute and adjunct associate professor, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School"In The Presence of the Absence, Carlos Sluzki shows across decades of consultations with families in distress that it is the still swirling relationship with a family member that shapes other family members’ lives, even though that family member may be long deceased. Carlos so keenly discerns the political contexts of patients’ problems that his family interventions have the impact of human rights declarations and are acts of liberation."—James L. Griffith, MD, Leon M. Yochelson Professor and Chair, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, The George Washington University."Carlos Sluzki invites us into the heart of his brilliant and inspiring work in this amazing volume. In every chapter, his wisdom and humanity shine through, from his courageous engagement with clients who are suffering deeply to his broad systemic perspective illuminating social, cultural, and political injustices. His inspiring clinical stories reveal both the haunting pain of traumatic loss and the resilience that can be forged in accompanying clients wisely on their journey of healing and growth." —Froma Walsh, PhD, Mose & Sylvia Firestone Professor Emerita at the University of Chicago and co-founder & co-director of the Chicago Center for Family Health.Table of ContentsForeword Salvador Minuchin 1. Ethereal Presences 2. Forbidden Words, Forbidden Thoughts: Semantic and Somatic Effects of Political Repression in a Family with a Hole in its Center 3. Rekindling the Experience of Freedom: Ghosts of a Dictatorship and Reverberations in a Liberating Process 4. House Taken Over: Culture, Migration and Developmental Cycle in a Moroccan Family Overtaken by Ghosts 5. The Ancient Cult of Madame: When Therapists Trade Curiousity for Certainty 6. The Naming: The Awakening of Two Ghost Children 7. Saudades at the Edge of the Self and the Merits of "Portable Families" 8. Wrap Up

    15 in stock

    £24.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd When Professionals Weep

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhen Professionals Weep speaks to the humbling and often transformational moments that clinicians experience in their careers as caregivers and healersmoments when it is often hard to separate the influence of our own emotional responses and worldviews from the patient's or family's. When Professionals Weep addresses these poignant momentswhen the professional''s personal experiences with trauma, illness, death, and loss can subtly, often stealthily, surface and affect the helping process. This edition, like the first, both validates clinicians' experiences and also helps them process and productively address compassion fatigue, burnout, and secondary traumatic stress. New material in the second edition includes increased emphasis on the burgeoning fields of hospice and palliative care, organizational countertransference, mindfulness, and compassionate practice. It includes thought-provoking cases, self-assessments, and exercises that can be used on an individTrade Review"When Professionals Weep illuminates the healthy use of one's own self as a helping professional when caring for critically ill and dying patients and their family members. Without getting lost in psychoanalytic jargon, the authors provide practical tools and examples for the use of countertransference not only as an obstacle to be overcome but as a valuable means to more empathic care."The Rev. Pamela Cooper-White, PhD, Christiane Brooks Johnson Professor of Psychology and Religion at Union Theological Seminary "I encourage all caregivers to accept this powerful invitation to constructively self-critical practice in end-of-life and palliative care. Deeply introspective, caring, and generous professionals acknowledge their vulnerability to allowing personal experiences and issues to interfere in attuning to the particularities of what matters most to those they serve and offer invaluable guidance for recognizing the many ‘hooks’ of countertransference and turning that self-knowledge to their advantage in shaping the best possible caring relationships."Thomas Attig, PhD, professor of philosophy emeritus at Bowling Green State University and recipient of the 2015 ADEC Death Educator Award"Much has been written about the psychosocial needs of patients but far less about the experiences and needs of professionals. The second edition of When Professionals Weep eloquently describes these experiences. It is a beautiful portrayal of the sacred work of caring for the seriously ill and the first requirement to do that well—caring for ourselves."Betty Ferrell, PhD, RN, MA, FAAN, FPCN, CHPN, director and professor of nursing research and education at City of Hope in Duarte, California "All of our life experiences are like knots. We need to untie these knots or we are vulnerable to being ‘hooked.’ Countertransference occurs when clinical experiences hook onto our knots. In When Professionals Weep, 2nd edition, experienced clinicians reflect on countertransference experiences from a variety of settings and offer insights and practical solutions that will help clinicians at all levels. Another great contribution to the field from Katz and Johnson!"Mary L.S. Vachon, PhD, RN, professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of Toronto and a psychotherapist in private practiceTable of ContentsSeries Editor’s Foreword Foreword Preface Part I: Introduction 1.When Our Personal Selves Influence Our Professional Work: An Introduction to Emotions and Countertransference in Palliative and End-of-Life Care Renee S. Katz, PhD Part II: Special Issues in Palliative and End-of-Life Care 2. Suffering and the Caring Professional Patrick Arbore, EdD, Renee S. Katz , PhD and Therese A. Johnson, MA 3. Risking Connection: Spirituality in Palliative and End-of-Life Care David Wendleton, M.Div, Ted Bowman, M.Div, Therese A. Johnson, MA, and Renee S. Katz, PhD 4. Client, Clinician and Supervisor: The Dance of Parallel Process Tessa ten Tusscher, Ph.D. 5. Compassionate Decision-Making Near the End of Life Sharmon Figenshaw BSN, MN, ARNP, ACHPN Part III: Specific Populations and Settings 6. The Influence of Culture and Ethnicity on Palliative and End-of-Life Care Sandra A. Lopez 7. Torture, Execution, and Abandonment: The Hospitalized Terminally Ill and Countertransference John W. Barnhill, M.D. 8.The Horror and Helplessness of Violent Death Edward K. Rynearson, M.D., Therese Johnson, M.A., & Fanny Correa, M.S.W. 9. Professionalism and our Humanity: Working with Children in Palliative and End- of- Life Care Jane Doe, RN, BSN and Renee S. Katz, PhD 10. Ghosts in the Consulting Room: Bereavement, Grief and the Therapist Bev Osband, Ph.D. Part IV: Social, Legal, Ethical and Organizational Influences 11. Prisms of the Heart: The Journey of Palliative Care Terry Altilio, MSW and Bridget Sumser, MSW 12. The Seduction of Autonomy: Countertransference and Physician Aid-in-Dying Brian Kelly, BMed, PhD, FRANZCP, FAChPM & Francis T. N. Varghese, MBBS, BMedSci, FRANZCP 13. The Desire to Die: Voices from the Trenches Renee S. Katz, PhD and Therese A. Johnson, MA 14. Futility and Beneficence: Where Ethics and Countertransference Intersect in Palliative and End-of-Life Care Therese A. Johnson, MA Part V: Implications for Practice: Models to Address Countertransference in Palliative and End-of-Life Care 15. The Respectful Death Model: Difficult Conversations in Palliative and End-of-Life Care Annalu Farber, MBA and Stu Farber, MD 16. Balint Groups to Address Countertransference and Burnout in Palliative and End-of-Life Care Katherine Knowlton, PhD and Renee S. Katz, PhD 17. Mindfulness in Palliative and End-of-Life Care: Meeting the Moment Fully Renee S. Katz, Phd 18. A Group Intervention to Process and Examine Countertransference in Palliative and End Of Life Care Yael Danieli, Ph.D. Part VI:Conclusion 19. The Journey Inside: Examining Countertransference and Its Implications for Practice in Palliative and End-of-Life Care Renee S. Katz, PhD Part VII: Epilogue 20. Living Every Minute Stuart Farber, MD

    15 in stock

    £37.04

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Advances in Contemporary Psychoanalytic Field

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisField Theory is a powerful and growing paradigm within psychoanalysis, but has previously been split between various schools of thought with little overlap. In this book, a distinguished group of contributors from across all perspectives on Field Theory examine its uniting factors and set out future developments and directions for the paradigm within psychoanalysis. Advances in Contemporary Psychoanalytic Field Theory represents the work developed for the first international meeting of the International Field Theory Association. Founded in 2015 to offer a community for those interested in psychoanalytic field theory and promote its understanding and further development, IFTA recognizes all models of psychoanalytic field theory and seeks to foster communication amongst psychoanalysts working in different models, languages and parts of the world. At the first ever meeting of IFTA, an international group of psychoanalysts participated in a roundtable discussiTrade Review"Field Theory has become an area of intense interest and research in Psychoanalysis and is quickly establishing itself as an important paradigm for both contemporary theoretical reflection and clinical practice. It is also interesting to note that through the work of IFTA, field theory is bridging the gap between the different conceptual approaches among psychoanalysts of various cultures and distinct training backgrounds and stimulating dialogue and discussion. One of the first products of this rich project (of which we expect much more to come) is this powerful volume. In its pages we find very clear presentations of different approaches to field theory, which lays central emphasis on bi-personal interactions within dreamlike frameworks. For the above reasons, I consider this volume to be indispensable reading to those wishing to remain well-informed about recent developments in psychoanalysis."-Elias Mallet da Rocha Barros, Latin American Chair of IPA Encyclopedic Dictionary of Psychoanalysis Task, Fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society and Training Analyst of the Brazilian Psychoanalytical Society of São Paulo. "Central to contemporary developments in psychoanalytic theory is the recognition that both patient and analyst co-participate unconsciously in all analytic engagement. The evolution of this recognition has emerged independently from different traditions and different geographies. Though all field theories share significant common ground, these different strains are also distinct from one another in significant ways. This edited volume, presenting work from the entire spectrum of many of the leading contemporary field therapists, offers the fortunate reader a thorough map of the range of ways that field theory has become a central force in today's psychoanalytic conversation."-Irwin Hirsch, Adjunct clinical professor of psychology and supervisor, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy; Author, The Interpersonal Tradition (2015). This edited volume gives a perspective on psychoanalytic field theories that is both wide and deep. Authors from different theoretical perspectives and different psychoanalytic cultures create a rich accessible picture of how field theory shapes clinical practice, differences in clinical listening, in technical moves, in attention to the subtlety of how experience is represented, embodied and communicated. Field theories develop distinct metapsychologies and most crucially attend to the deeply intricate relation of analyst and analysand. For English speaking readers, I think it will be most interesting to notice the powerful effect of the cultural field on particular theoretical developments. South American, North American, Italian and European field theories differ and interrelate in complex ways. The editors of this collection have done an amazing job of conjuring up a complex field of theories. In a way unusual for comparative psychoanalytic books, these essays can hold the complexity of differences and commonalities."-Adrienne Harris, New York University."This book presents the most advanced ideas on a new frontier of Psychoanalysis today.It offers a fundamental, comparative clarification of the different sources, meanings and developments of the concept of Analytic Field in the different Regions, creating innovative bridges, connections and dialogue among them. No better way for sharing a work in progress in our scientific community on a worldwide basis, in an authentic international perspective."-Stefano Bolognini, President International Psychoanalytical Association.Table of ContentsIntroduction; The Field Evolves Antonino Ferro; Not All Field Theories Are The Same: The Impact Of Listening Perspectives And Models Of Transference James Fosshage; Dialectics of transferential interpretation and analytic field Beatriz de Leon de Bernardi; About The Theory Of The Analytic Field Elsa Rapoport de Aisemberg; Notes On Transformations In Hallucinosis Giuseppe Civitarese; Psychoanalytic Field Theory: Good, Bad, Or Indifferent? Martin Silverman; Dreams And Non-Dreams: A Study On The Field Of Dreaming Roosevelt Cassorla; Analytic Field Theory –A Dialogical Approach, A Pluralistic Perspective, And The Attempt At A New Definition by Marco Conci; The Third Model of Contemporary Psychoanalytic Field Theory S. Montana Katz; The Analytic Field As A Resonator And Instrument For Revealing The Presence Of Other Fields Claudio Neri; Emergent Properties of the Interpersonal Field Donnel Stern; Field Theories And Process Theories Juan Tubert-Oklander; Commentary on Field Theory Presentations Joseph Lichtenberg.

    15 in stock

    £49.39

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Plural Psyche

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisPluralism can bridge the gaps that have opened up between personal experience, psychotherapy, and cultural criticism. In The Plural Psyche: Personality, Morality and the Father, a provocative, much praised and widely discussed book, Andrew Samuels lays bare the political implications of the personal struggle everyone has to hold their many inner divisions together. He also shows how pluralism can inspire new thinking in many areas including moral process, the construction of gender, and the role of the father in the development of sons and daughters. In addition, there are innovative chapters on clinical work, focusing on imagery and on countertransference. These themes come to life in a way that makes a significant contribution to debates about psychotherapy, gender, parenting and difference. This Classic Edition of The Plural Psyche includes a new introduction by the author. Trade Review‘Very relevant to important depth psychological controversies and even to important general political arguments of the present day … original and stimulating.’ - British Journal of Psychiatry‘A way to deal creatively, but by no means softly, with differing views of the psyche. … A first rate job … interesting, valuable and stimulating … lively and consciousness expanding.’ - Journal of Analytical PsychologyTable of ContentsIntroduction to the Classic Edition. Preface. The Plural Psyche. Personality and the Imaginal Network. Parental Images and the Self-monitoring Psyche. A Relation Called Father. The Father and his Children. Beyond the Feminine Principle. Gender and the Borderline. The Image of the Parents in Bed. Countertransference and the Mundus Imaginalis. The Alchemical Metaphor. Original Morality in a Depressed Culture. The Diversity of Psychology and the Psychology of Diversity.

    15 in stock

    £40.84

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Psychoanalysis Trauma and Community

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrauma is one of the hottest contemporary topics within psychoanalysis, whilst many psychoanalysts are increasingly interested in applying their skills outside the traditional setting of the consulting room, especially in response to disasters, wars and serious social issues. Psychoanalysis, Trauma, and Community seeks to correct the misconceptions of what analysts do and how they do it and debunk the stereotype of psychoanalysts stuck in their offices plying their wares on the worried well.Bringing together a group of eminent contributors, this volume considers how psychoanalysis may best be expanded to help in social and community settings, to understand these wider issues from a psychoanalytic perspective, and provide clear clinical guidance and clinical examples of how best to work in a wide variety of non-traditional ways. The innovative work featured includes taking testimony, in-situ interviewing, documentary film-making, social activism, ethnic and political coTrade Review"The essays here expand the boundaries of psychoanalysis, applying its principles to social problems and intelligent activism while aptly demonstrating the profound applicability of our field to the socio-cultural milieu. A broad spectrum of mass trauma–including but not limited to the Holocaust, Hurricane Katrina, and September 11th–is attended to by courageous analysts who understand that their vocation must move them beyond the office walls. In the alternative tradition of Harry Stack Sullivan and Robert J. Lifton, this powerful and highly recommended volume importantly reminds us that psychoanalytic principles and practice can and should reach far outside the usual clinical frame."-Danielle Knafo, Author, Living with Terror, Working with Trauma: A Clinician’s Handbook."Psychoanalysis, Trauma and Community is essential reading for all citizen-psychoanalysts, as we meet a critical juncture in history. Confronting the effects of global violence, hatred, poverty, and oppression, we are being called by social justice. How do we apply analytic premises outside the office? The authors in this volume re-frame analytic theory, offering us a compelling guide and source of inspiration and hope."-Sue Grand, NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and psychoanalysis; faculty, National Institute for the Psychotherapies; faculty, the Mitchell Center for Relational Psychoanalysis and visiting scholar, the Psychoanalytic Institute of Northern California."The essays here expand the boundaries of psychoanalysis, applying its principles to social problems and intelligent activism while aptly demonstrating the profound applicability of our field to the socio-cultural milieu. A broad spectrum of mass trauma–including but not limited to the Holocaust, Hurricane Katrina, and September 11th–is attended to by courageous analysts who understand that their vocation must move them beyond the office walls. In the alternative tradition of Harry Stack Sullivan and Robert J. Lifton, this powerful and highly recommended volume importantly reminds us that psychoanalytic principles and practice can and should reach far outside the usual clinical frame."-Danielle Knafo, Author, Living with Terror, Working with Trauma: A Clinician’s Handbook."Psychoanalysis, Trauma and Community is essential reading for all citizen-psychoanalysts, as we meet a critical juncture in history. Confronting the effects of global violence, hatred, poverty, and oppression, we are being called by social justice. How do we apply analytic premises outside the office? The authors in this volume re-frame analytic theory, offering us a compelling guide and source of inspiration and hope."-Sue Grand, NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and psychoanalysis; faculty, National Institute for the Psychotherapies; faculty, the Mitchell Center for Relational Psychoanalysis and visiting scholar, the Psychoanalytic Institute of Northern California.Table of ContentsForeword Nina K. ThomasIntroduction: Expanding our Analytic Identity: The Inclusion of a Larger Social Perspective Judith L. Alpert, Elizabeth R. Goren, & Andrea Rihm Part I. Receiving Testimony Reestablishing the internal "Thou" in testimony of trauma Dori Laub Dwelling at the Thresholds: Witnesses to Historical Trauma Across Concentric Fields Judy Roth Part II. Therapeutic Encounters Outside the Frame The multiple traumas of Hurricane Katrina as witnessed by a psychoanalytic first responder Laurel Bass Wagner Some Dark Reality: A community develops skills to cope with shared trauma Ghislaine Boulanger Psychoanalysis in and out of the office Neil Altman Part III. Facilitating Collective Mourning Intervention strategies for addressing collective trauma: Healing communities ravaged by racial strife Ricardo C. Ainslie Beyond "Thank You for Your Service": The Creation of Post-War Veteran/Non-Veteran Collaborative Mourning Spaces Donna Bassin Large-Group Identity and Massive Trauma Vamik D. Volkan Part IV. Psychoanalytic Scholarship and Activism The analyst as witness, historian and activist: A conversation with Robert Jay Lifton Elizabeth R. Goren & Judith L. Alpert My Fulbright Journey Mary-Joan Gerson Social trauma, politics and psychoanalysis: A personal narrative Nancy Caro Hollander Institutional Betrayal and the Case of the American Psychological Association: The Role of Psychoanalysts and Psychoanalysis in Challenging It Elizabeth Hegeman Robert Jay Lifton: A Witness and Prophet Who Feels Deeply and Assaults our Minds Lewis Aron Conclusion: Psychoanalysis, Trauma & Community: Lessons Learned Alison Lake, Elizabeth R. Goren, & Judith L. Alpert

    15 in stock

    £44.64

  • Taylor & Francis The Alchemy of Wolves and Sheep A Relational Approach to Internalized Perpetration in Complex Trauma Survivors

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe literature on psychological trauma and traumatic attachment has progressed over the past few decades, however issues of coerced and internalized perpetration have not been fully explored and deconstructed. This book presents a synthesis of relational and archetypal psychology, trauma and dissociation theory, and highly relevant child soldier literature, to offer new clinical perspectives to assist psychotherapists and trauma patients to achieve more successful therapy outcomes. The Alchemy of Wolves and Sheep offers instructive, cautionary and innovative therapeutic approaches to help transform the lives of survivors of complex trauma. Providing an explanation of how the effects of coerced perpetration trauma are built, and the damage done to the psyches and lives of most trauma victims, the book extends our knowledge base in a thorough deconstruction of the nature of perpetration and its effects on the psyche. Chapters include:- trauma, dissociation, and coTrade Review'Schwartz expands the interdisciplinary dialogue between the psychoanalytic and trauma/ dissociation communities that treat people subject to traumatic attachment, mind control, thought reform, coerced perpetration and, complicity in all of these. The author synthesizes the overlapping clinical traditions of trauma/ dissociation theory, contemporary/ relational psychoanalysis, archetypal models (Jungian and Buddhist/ transpersonal psychology), cult/ ritual abuse/mind control treatment, and child soldier demobilization with specific therapeutic actions... This book is a welcome addition to the literature and is meant to be read pensively, pondered and thoughtfully considered.'- Barney Greenspan, PhD, ABPP, Journal of Trauma and Dissociation, February 2015'The Alchemy of Wolves and Sheep provides breakthrough persepctives to allow previously unknown points of access to better understand and treat some of the most intractable conditions of the human spirit...If clinicians are able to comprehend and work with the populations that are mentioned throughout this book, then working with other types of traumatized individuals should be a piece of cake. For this reason alone The Alchemy of Wolves and Sheep is worth its weight in gold.' - Robert Grant, The Therapist, November 2014'This outstanding scholarly work explores aspects of humanity which are often deemed unthinkable. It gives new meaning to ‘holding the space’ for healing in profoundly difficult contexts and speaks of transformation. It will resonate with anyone who is concerned about atrocities against children, especially clinicians who work with child and adult survivors of complex trauma and mind control.' - Sue Richardson, UKCP registered Attachment-based Psychoanalytic PsychotherapistTable of ContentsThe Alchemy of Wolves and Sheep. The Child Soldier as Model of Internalized Perpetration. Dilemmas of Dissociative Survival. Mind Control. Perpetration and Perpetrator States. Transforming Perpetration. Treatment Concepts and Trajectories. Using Archetypal Concepts as a Vehicle of Integration.

    15 in stock

    £40.84

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Wounded Healer

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn the years since the publication of The Wounded Healer, countertransference has become a central consideration in the analytic process. David Sedgwick's work was ground-breaking in tackling this difficult topic from a Jungian perspective and demonstrating how countertransference can be used in positive ways. Sedgwick's extended study of the process candidly presents the analyst's struggles and shows how the analyst is, as Jung said, as much in the analysis as the patient. The book extends Jung's prescient work on countertransference to create a dynamic view of the analyst-patient interaction, stressing the importance of the analyst's own woundedness and how this may be used in conjunction with the patient's own. Sedgwick begins with a discussion of the need and justification for a Jungian approach to countertransference, then reviews Jungian theories and presents detailed illustrations of cases showing the complexity of transference-countertransference processes in bTrade Review‘The Wounded Healer really is a ‘classic’! The descriptions in depth of what the patient means to the analyst are as fresh, dynamic, moving and instructive now as they were twenty five years ago. Sedgwick, as much as anyone, is responsible for making sure that Jungian analysis is recognised as a pioneering strand in the emergence of psychotherapy as a relational enterprise. The book will be of interest to all clinicians, whether Jungian or not.’ - Professor Andrew Samuels, co-editor of Relational Psychotherapy, Psychoanalysis and Counselling: Appraisals and Reappraisals (Routledge, 2014).Table of ContentsIntroduction to the Classic Edition. Introduction. Jungian Approaches to Countertransference: A Review. Case Illustrations. Conclusions. Notes. References. Index.

    15 in stock

    £42.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd PostJungian Psychology and the Short Stories of

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn this book, Steve Gronert Ellerhoff explores short stories by Ray Bradbury and Kurt Vonnegut, written between 1943 and 1968, with a post-Jungian approach. Drawing upon archetypal theories of myth from Joseph Campbell, James Hillman and their forbearer C. G. Jung, Ellerhoff demonstrates how short fiction follows archetypal patterns that can illuminate our understanding of the authors, their times, and their culture. In practice, a post-Jungian mythodology' is shown to yield great insights for the literary criticism of short fiction.Chapters in this volume carefully contextualise and historicize each story, including Bradbury and Vonnegut's earliest and most imaginatively fantastic works. The archetypal constellations shaping Vonnegut's early works are shown to be war and fragmentation, while those in Bradbury's are family and the wholeness of the sun. Analysis is complemented by the explored significance of illustrations that featured alongside the stories in their fiTrade Review"Ellerhoff’s fascinating post-Jungian analysis of these stories not only situates these texts within the broader theoretical framework of archetypal psychology, but he also carefully contextualises them within the unique historical moment of post-war America."- Miranda Corcoran, Journal of the Irish Association for American StudiesTable of Contents1. A Post-Jungian Mythodology for Reading Short Stories 2. War’s Shadow: Vonnegut’s Conflicts with Arms 3. Fragmented Independence: Vonnegut’s Critiques of the American Trinity 4. Dynamic Domesticities: Bradbury Splits the Nuclear Family 5. Hope for Wholeness: Bradbury’s Heliocentric Individuation 6. Epilogue: Golden Apples of the Monkey House

    15 in stock

    £133.00

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Lectures on Technique by Melanie Klein

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisLectures on Technique by Melanie Klein is based on a series of six lectures given by Melanie Klein to students at the British Psychoanalytical Society in 1936 and repeated several times in subsequent years. They were discovered in the Melanie Klein Archives housed in the Wellcome Medical Library and have been previously described by Elizabeth Spillius but never before published. In this book, John Steiner explores what characterises Kleinian Technique, how her technique changed over the years, what she saw as the correct psychoanalytical attitude and how psychoanalytic technique has changed since Klein's death.Melanie Klein, who moved to England from Berlin in 1927, became one of the leading psychoanalysts, following Freud and making an important contribution in the theory and practice of psychoanalysis. A pioneer in child analysis, her work remains widely influential throughout the world. This book consists of the full text of the original six lecturesTrade Review"Alive with clinical material, always illuminating and often surprising, this landmark collection of Melanie Klein’s previously unpublished technical writings provides a unique glimpse into the groundbreaking but always nuanced vision of a theorist whose ideas continue to shape today’s psychoanalytic conversations. Klein’s early lectures and a later series of seminars on technique show her grappling, creatively and compassionately, with the challenge of using her often startling insights to help suffering patients. The book is essential reading not only for those who are interested in the evolution of Klein’s thinking, but for anybody engaged in thinking about psychoanalytic theory and practice."-Jay Greenberg, Ph.D., Editor, The Psychoanalytic Quarterly.Table of ContentsForeword by Michael FeldmanPart 1 Introduction, Outline and Critical Review of Klein’s Lectures and Seminars on TechniquePart 2 The Lectures on Technique, 1936IntroductionLecture 1: Guiding PrinciplesLecture 2: Aspects of the Transference SituationLecture 3: Transference and Interpretation Lecture 4: Clinical Illustration of Transference and InterpretationLecture 5: Experiences and PhantasyLecture 6: The Analysis of GrievancesPart 3 The Seminars on Technique, 1958Appendix A List of PatientsAppendix B Lecture 5 Verbatim from the Archive

    15 in stock

    £43.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Love the Wild Swan

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisLove the Wild Swan is the culmination of thirty years of clinical and teaching experience, undertaken by child and adolescent psychoanalytic psychotherapist Judith Edwards. Along with new material, the book consists of previously published papers spanning Edwards's entire career, which have been carefully selected to chart the journey that every clinician and human being makes, from babyhood to adult life.Edwards offers an example of how the evolution of meanings occur and how lifelong learning about the self and the other takes place. The book is divided into four parts, with sections on observation, clinical work, teaching theory, and links between these ideas and ongoing life in the form of the arts, through poetry, film and sculpture. Love the Wild Swan will be of interest to practitioners and clinicians, as well as appealing to anyone in the field of mental health who wishes to reflect on the nature of human development and growth.Trade Review'Like the Wild Swan glides, Judith Edwards' writing flows, with great elegance. Her wide ranging cultural interests combine with her clinical acumen, to open new ways of thinking. This book is a really interesting read, both for those in the profession, and beyond.' - Irma Brenman Pick, Distinguished Fellow and Child and Adult Psychoanalyst BPAS 'This is a wise and wonderful book of 'twisted tales', beautifully calibrated by reference to personal, clinical and cultural life. Coming to know oneself through Memoir is the solid and steady background of it all – the intensity of trying to expose and explore the self in the course of psychoanalytically based training and teaching across the life cycle, especially during childhood. Judith Edwards' writing offers a breadth and depth of reference that is both accessible and utterly refreshing. Beneath these lovely pages there lies, fundamentally, a focus on meaning – what does something really mean to someone? How does one gain access to that? Sorting it out, significantly through the quality and capacities for observation, both of self and other, makes genuine growth possible. Love the Wild Swan gives us an informed and moving contribution to this process.' - Margot Waddell, Fellow of the Institute of Psychoanalysis, former consultant child and adolescent psychotherapist, and author of 'Inside Lives'. 'Judith Edwards is a Child Psychotherapist with wide-ranging interests and expertise. She has a special gift for appreciating and exploring the interconnections of clinical psychoanalytic practice with the arts.This impressive and scholarly volume includes some original contributions to vital topics within child psychotherapy, including work on the complexities of adoption, and chapters on psychoanalytic observation and theory and the challenges of teaching both in a spirit of enquiry. The breadth of her knowledge of literature,especially poetry, and film makes the section offering readings of individual works of art a pleasure to read. She writes with clarity and grace, which will enable her readers to engage in ideas arising from diverse fields of knowledge and culture with enjoyment. This is a book to open minds in many different directions and to interest many people.' - Margaret Rustin, former Head of Child Psychotherapy Training at the Tavistock Clinic'The writing of Judith Edwards has an imaginative spontaneity unusual in psychoanalytic papers, reflecting her conviction that the emotional complexities of the consulting room are enriched and clarified by free association to other fields, in particular to the various storytelling modes. Her empathic work with children bears testimony to her self-questioning and her belief in the need for vigilance in keeping theory ‘usable’ and in a constant state of refreshment.' - Meg Harris Williams, writer and artistTable of ContentsForeword General Introduction Section 1 1.Suffering, Weeping and other preoccupations: Darwin's observations and our present day practice 2 .Early Splitting and Projective Identification 3 Teaching Observation to non-clinical students Section 2 4: Towards solid ground: the ongoing journey of an adolescent boy with autistic features5. You can?€?t miss what you?€?ve never had. Can you? The challenges and struggles of single parenthood from a psychoanalytic perspective 6. On being dropped and picked up: The plight of some late adopted children Section 3 7. Teaching, learning and Bion?€?s Model of digestion 8. Before the threshold: Destruction, reparation and creativity before the depressive position 9. Ripples in mental space caused by dark matters and twisted tales: Some reflections on memory, memoirs and therapeutic work Section 4 10. Teaching and learning about psychoanalysis: Film as a teaching tool, with reference to a particular film, Morvern Callar 11. Sifting through the sands of time: Mourning and melancholia revisited through a film 12. Seeing and being seen: The dialectics of intimate space and Antony Gormley's Event Horizon 13.The elusive pursuit of insight: Three poems by W.B.Yeats and the human task

    15 in stock

    £123.50

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Shortterm Psychodynamic Therapy with Children in

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn Short-Term Psychodynamic Therapy with Children in Crisis, Elisabeth Cleve presents the therapeutic stories of four children who have experienced trauma or are displaying dramatic clinical symptoms such as low self-esteem and anxiety. Exploring the situation between the individual child and the therapist, the therapeutic space and their experiences, each chapter follows the sessions and the progress made, concluding with a follow-up after the end of therapy. Cleve explores each case as it progresses, emphasising the inner strength of the children and including the interactions between the therapist and the children's parents. The focus of the psychotherapeutic encounter is in each case to help the child face the trauma, mourn what had been suffered and then move on in life with renewed strength. The final chapters explore the ethics of sharing case material and present Cleve's reflections on working with traumatised children, and the book also includes forewords by LTrade Review‘Elisabeth Cleve describes her young patients in such a loving manner. She consistently underscores the positive aspects of the processes she depicts. The reader is both happy to meet these children and awed by them. What a strong spirit they show! And what imaginative survival strategies they come up with!’ - Lars H Gustafsson, from the foreword‘The stories about Ronia and the other children show not only Elisabeth’s literary talent but also how she dealt with the issues of anonymity and ethics referred to above. I hope these stories will capture the reader’s imagination and interest. They are poignant, humorous, moving, bewildering and intellectually stimulating; in short they possess all the qualities that make for good reading.’ - Björn Salomonsson, from the forewordTable of ContentsForeword by Lars H. Gustafsson. Foreword by Bjorn Salomonsson. Author’s Preface. Introduction. 1. Grown-ups mustn’t do stuff like that to little kids, right? 2. How long will she be dead? 3. Children who feel second rate make others feel the same way. 4. A mother’s trauma becomes her son’s trauma. 5. Sharing narratives with child patients. 6. The child psychologist’s reflections after concluded work. Bibliography. Appendix I, Written agreement between parents and psychologist. Appendix II, Written agreement between child and psychologist.

    15 in stock

    £40.84

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Radical Psychoanalysis

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis2020 American Board & Academy of Psychoanalysis (ABAPsa) book award winner! Only by the method of free-association could Sigmund Freud have demonstrated how human consciousness is formed by the repression of thoughts and feelings that we consider dangerous. Yet today most therapists ignore this truth about our psychic life. This book offers a critique of the many brands of contemporary psychoanalysis and psychotherapy that have forgotten Freud''s revolutionary discovery. Barnaby B. Barratt offers a fresh and compelling vision of the structure and function of the human psyche, building on the pioneering work of theorists such as André Green and Jean Laplanche, as well as contemporary deconstruction, feminism, and liberation philosophy. He explores how drive' or desire operates dynamically between our biological body and our mental representations of ourselves, of others, and of the world we inhabit. This dynamic vision not only demonstrates how the only authTrade Review‘This brilliantly conceptualized and carefully constructed argument that psychoanalysis must return to Freud's most revolutionary method is not simply timely, but essential to the growth of psychoanalytical theory and practice.’ – Christopher Bollas, from the foreword‘This book is full of passion, a "cri de coeur" by a committed psychoanalyst. Dr Barratt advocates a return to Freud different from Lacan's. He goes further - searching for roots that even Freud forgot because of his need for scientific respectability. Barratt reminds us that the cornerstone of psychoanalysis is Freud’s method of free-association, which opens and exposes the repressed unconscious that is rooted in the flesh - the way of listening to our drives, which are virtually infinite vectors of freedom of thought. One should read this book!’ - Marilia Aisenstein, Paris Psychoanalytic Society‘Free-association is the radical psychoanalytic clinical position that Dr Barratt faces head on and with subtle complexity of technique, philosophy and history. Skillful descriptions of Freud’s theory building and metapsychology together with a constant gaze on the ethics of psychoanalysis are woven together in a rethought history that becomes the reader’s constant companion. For Barratt interpretation must always be subordinated to the ongoing quest for a free-associative matrix. This is a tour-de-force!’ - Dr Jonathan Sklar, British Psychoanalytic Society‘Radical Psychoanalysis underlines Freud’s emphasis on the method of free-association as what is essential, central and defining for psychoanalysis. It is, as the author puts it, "a method that uniquely discloses, and to a certain extent undoes, the repressiveness of human self-consciousness." Dr Barratt rightly calls his text a manifesto which urges us "to commit existentially to the method of free-association." Its liberatory intent succeeds - reading it moves us into the ‘workplay’ of lived experience at its center. Laplanche and Green to whom the book is dedicated would be pleased.’ - Dr Jonathan House, American Psychoanalytic AssociationTable of ContentsForeword by Christopher Bollas. Introductory Note. What is Radical Psychoanalysis? Freudian Roots I. Freudian Roots II. Sampling Free-associative Discourse. Textual Analysis and the Dogma of Interpretation. The Lessons of the Method: Psychic Energy. The Lessons of the Method: Theorizing Praxis. The Lessons of the Method: Triebe and Psychic Reality. On the Paramount Significance of our Psychosexualities. The Necessity of the Psychoanalyst. Resisting Praxis: Notes on Clinical and Theoretical Retreats. What is Freeing about Free-Associative Praxis?

    15 in stock

    £161.50

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Adlerian Psychotherapy: An Advanced Approach to Individual Psychology

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisAdlerian Psychotherapy gives an account of Adlerian therapy and counselling from its origins to the present day, and proposes an advanced version of the theory. The main principles and concepts of Adler's thinking are re-examined from a contemporary perspective, placing them in the context of other contemporary approaches. Adler's techniques are described then applied to an understanding of what an Adlerian approach to family life would look like, using clinical examples throughout. The authors analyse the possible contribution of Adlerian theory in the context of the challenges of postmodern thought and postmodern society. It will be invaluable to professionals, practitioners and students of counselling and psychotherapy.Table of ContentsHistorical Context, Roots, and Early Developments. Classical Adlerian Psychology. Adlerian Counselling and Psychotherapy Today. Child Guidance and Parenting. Adlerian Family Counselling and Family Psychotherapy. Adlerian Therapy and its Relationship to other Psychotherapeutic Approaches. Adlerian Psychology - Further Developments and Relevance in a Post-Modern World.

    15 in stock

    £34.19

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Archetype, Attachment, Analysis: Jungian

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisArchetype, Attachment, Analysis is a well-researched presentation of new material that offers a revision and reinterpretation of Jung's archetypal hypothesis. The author's ground breaking new exploration of expanding knowledge from other disciplines such as cognitive science and developmental psychology, and attachment theory and research evidence sheds important new light on Jungian theory and practice. Using information gathered through laboratory investigations and natural observational studies Jean Knox brings the notion of archetypes up to date and considers the implications of new paradigms for clinical work with patients. This book will become essential reading for all professionals and students of analytical psychology.Trade ReviewWhile. for me, the concept of the archetype retains an elusive quality, Jean Knox has helped me to understand and value it better than I did before through the links she has made outside her discipline. Her discussion of psychopathology and clinical practice is relevant, stimulating, and, I would say, necessary read for psychoanalytic Psychotherapists. - Christopher Clulow in The Journal of Analytical Psychology, June 2004Table of ContentsForeword, Peter Fonagy. Introduction. Jung's Various Models of Archetypes. Archetypes and Image Schemas - a Developmental Perspective. The Making of Meaning - the Formation of Internal Working Models. Trauma and Defences- their Roots in Relationship. Reflective Function - The Mind as an Internal Object. The Process of Change in Analysis and the Role of the Analyst. Conclusions - Science and Symbols.

    15 in stock

    £40.84

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Jung and Film: Post-Jungian Takes on the Moving Image

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisJung and Film brings together some of the best new writing from both sides of the Atlantic, introducing the use of Jungian ideas in film analyis.Illustrated with examinations of seminal films including Pulp Fiction, Blade Runner, and 2001 - A Space Odyssey, Chris Hauke and Ian Alister, along with an excellent array of contributors, look at how Jungian ideas can help us understand films and the genres to which they belong.The book also includes a glossary to help readers with Jungian terminology. Taking a fresh look at an ever-changing medium, Jung and Film is essential reading for academics and students of analytical psychology, as well as film, media and cultural studies.Table of ContentsC. Hauke, I. Alister, Introduction. List of films. Acknowledgements. A Jungian Perspective. D. Fredericksen, Jung/Sign/Symbol/Film. L. Lennihan, The Alchemy of Pulp Fiction. P. Berry, The Moving Image, Particular Films. J. Hollwitz, The Grail Quest and Field of Dreams. J. Ryan, Dark City. D. Williams, 'If you Could See what I've Seen with your Eyes...' Post-human Psychology and Blade Runner. J. Izod, 2001 - A Space Odyssey. C. Hauke, 'Let's Get Back to Finding Out who we Are': Men, Unheimlich and Returning Home in The Films of Steven Spielberg. L. Hockley, Studies in Genres and Gender. Film Noir: Archetypes or Stereotypes. M. Dougherty, Love-life: The Use of Films in Analysis in the Interpretation of Gender. J. Beebe, Anima in Film. J. Wyly, 'Gay Sensibility', the Hermaphrodite, and Pedro Almodovar's Films. Glossary.

    15 in stock

    £35.14

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Importance of Fathers: A Psychoanalytic Re-evaluation

    15 in stock

    It is widely acknowledged that children need structure, security, stability and attachment to develop and flourish, and that the father is an important part of this.Issues such as high divorce rates, new family structures, increased mobility, women's liberation and contraception are very common in society. This book sets out to explore what has happened to men and to fathers during all these changes and transitions. Judith Trowell and Alicia Etchegoyen, along with an array of renowned contributors, consider the importance of fathers in various situations, including: the role of the father at different stage of children's development the missing father loss of a father grandfathers. It is argued that the father is important, not only to support the main carer (usually the mother) but also to provide a caring, thinking, comfortable, confident presence.

    15 in stock

    £37.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Gender, Countertransference and the Erotic

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisHow do gender and sexual difference influence the erotic transference?Gender, Countertransference and the Erotic Transference offers new insights into working with complex transference and countertransference phenomena. Including views from a wide spectrum of theoretical backgrounds, it makes a unique contribution to discourse on the themes of gender, sexuality and the erotic transference.The contributors are highly experienced clinicians with international reputations as theorists in the fields of analytical psychology, psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic psychotherapy. Illustrated with closely observed clinical examples and detailed theoretical discussion, innovations in technique are introduced on themes including developmental mourning, female perversion, the meaning and purpose of the erotic transference, the dying patient, lesbian homoerotic transference and supervision of the erotic transference. Countertransference is vividly explored in chapters on sexual difference, the therapist’s body and the challenging topic of perversion in the analyst. The book is divided into four sections: gender and the erotic transference the erotic transference and the symbolic function women working with women historical perspectives on women working with men. Gender, Countertransference and the Erotic Transference extends existing theory, highlighting the symbolic nature of the transference/countertransference dynamic. It will be compelling reading for experienced clinicians, students and trainees in the fields of psychoanalysis, analytical psychology and psychoanalytic psychotherapy, as well as counselling, the arts therapies and social work.Table of ContentsSchaverien, Introduction. Part I: Gender and the Erotic Transference. Schaverien, Men Who Leave Too Soon: Reflections on the Erotic Transference and Countertransference. Schaverien, Individuation at the End of Life: A Study of Erotic Transference and Countertransference. Schaverien, Supervising the Erotic Transference and Countertransference. Part II: Erotic Transferences and the Symbolic Function. Springer, Paying Homage to the Power of Love: Exceeding the Bounds of Professional Practice. Covington, Purposive Aspects of the Erotic Transference. Kavaler-Adler, Mourning and Erotic Transference. Ellis, Who Speaks? Who Listens? Different Voices and Different Sexualities. Part III: Women Working with Women. Williams, Women in Search of Women: Clinical Issues that Underlie a Woman's Search for a Female Therapist. Kavaler-Adler, Lesbian Homoerotic Transference in Dialectic with Developmental Mourning: On the Way to Symbolism from the Protosymbolic. Springer, Female Perversion: Scenes and Strategies in Analysis and Culture. Orbach, What Can We Learn From the Therapist's Body? Part IV: Historical Perspectives on Women Working with Men. Guttman, Sexual Issues in the Transference and Countertransference Between Female Therapist and Male Patient. Kulish, Gender and Transference: The Screen of the Phallic Mother. Karme, The Analysis of a Male Patient by a Female Analyst: The Problem of the Negative Oedipal Transference. Goldberger, Holmes, On Transference Manifestations in Male Patients with Female Analysts.

    15 in stock

    £37.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd For and Against Psychoanalysis

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisPsychoanalysis has always been a source of controversy throughout academic and popular culture. This controversy relates to questions of its true value, its scientific status, its politics and its therapeutic effectiveness. Psychoanalysis' defenders regard it as a body of knowledge built on careful and painstaking exploration of complex clinical encounters, offering more detailed and valid insights than can be obtained from other sources. Psychoanalysis is also a building block for considerations of human subjectivity in a wide range of academic disciplines and practical areas of work, from social theory to feminist studies, to counselling and psychotherapy.In this thoroughly revised and updated second edition of For and Against Psychoanalysis, Stephen Frosh examines the arguments surrounding psychoanalysis at some key points: its standing as a scientific theory, its value as a method of therapy, its potency as a contributor to debates around identity construction, gender, homosexuality and racism. At each of these points, there is something to be said 'for and against' psychoanalysis, with the balance depending on whether it deepens our understanding of human functioning, whether it is consistent with its own perceptions and theories or seems subservient to social pressures and norms, and whether it is coherent or muddled, evocative or sterile. For and Against Psychoanalysis provides an accessible introduction and critical guide to the current standing of psychoanalysis. It is essential reading for students of psychoanalysis, counselling, psychotherapy and psychology, and for social researchers and social theorists, as well as for those who are simply interested in what place psychoanalysis has in the modern world.Trade Review'I very much enjoyed the first edition of For and Against Psychoanalysis. This new, updated edition is even more enjoyable. It is immensely readable because of the frankness, wit, verve, and seriousness with which Stephen Frosh details the fascinations and frustrations of the continuing ramifications of Freud's discovery of unconscious fantasy. The result is a book which is both an exciting introduction to the current philosophical, clinical, and social impact of Freudian and post-Freudian psychoanalysis, and also a very welcome and refreshing reminder to its teachers and practitioners of its problems and potential.' - Janet Sayers, Professor of Psychoanalytic Psychology, University of Kent, Canterbury'The in-your-face title masks the most subtle, nuanced and balanced discussion of the strengths and weaknesses of psychoanalysis as treatment, theoretical perspective and social influence. Frosh admits to his biases and enthusiasms and wears his learning lightly. Hence the second edition of this much-admired book will be of continuing use to students and trainees as well as to faculty and qualified psychotherapists and counsellors.' - Andrew Samuels, Professor of Analytical Psychology, University of Essex‘In this second edition of For And Against Psychoanalysis, Stephen Frosh has scrupulously reworked the earlier text. The second edition retains the remarkable breadth and scope of the original, while expanding and updating Frosh’s overview to include additional subject areas, such as ways in which psychoanalysis has contributed to the examination of social issues.’ – Bruce Reis, Psychologist-Psychoanalyst, Fall 2007 Table of ContentsPreface and Acknowledgements. Introduction: The Psychoanalytic Heritage. Part I: Knowledge. Science, Mysticism and Subjectivity. Knowledge and Interpretation. Part II: Psychotherapy. Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy - Does Talking Make Things Worse? Five: The Rules of The Game. The Outcome of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. Part III: Society. Psychoanalysis and the Politics of Identity. Psychoanalytic Gender. On Male and Female Homosexuality. Psychoanalysing Racism. Conclusion.

    15 in stock

    £34.19

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd In Pursuit of Psychic Change: The Betty Joseph

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe members of the Betty Joseph Workshop have provided major contributions to psychoanalytic thinking since the meeting's inception in 1962. This book is a celebration of Betty Joseph's work, and the work of a group of analysts who have joined her to discuss obstacles to psychic change in psychoanalytic treatment.A prestigious line up of contributors present clinical material for discussion on a range of topics including: Supporting psychic change Complacency in analysis and everyday life Containment, enactment and communication. The history of psychoanalysis is one of an ongoing struggle to reach a new understanding of the human psyche and develop more effective methods of treatment. In Pursuit of Psychic Change reflects this tradition - discussions of each contribution by other members of the group provide an in-depth exploration of the merits and limitations of a developing analytic technique, in the hope of achieving true psychic change.All psychoanalysts will benefit from the insights provided into the original and stimulating work of the members of the Betty Joseph Workshop.Trade Review"The book begins with an admirable introduction by the editors... The quality of these papers emerging from the Betty Joseph Workshop is outstanding" – Jean Arundale, British Journal of Psychotherapy Table of ContentsFeldman, Supporting Psychic Change: Betty Joseph, Discussion by Ignes Sodré. Steiner, Containment, Enactment and Communication, Discussion by Arturo Varchevker. Sodré, Who's Who? Notes on Pathological Identifications, Discussion by Betty Joseph, Priscilla Roth. Britton, Complacency in Analysis and Everyday Life, Discussion by David Taylor. Roth, Mapping the Landscape, Discussion by Michael Feldman, Arturo Varchevker. Daniel, A Phantasy of Murder and its Consequences, Discussion by Betty Joseph, Richard Lucas. Spoto, Luxuriating in Stupefaction: The Analysis of a Narcissistic Fetish, Discussion by Martha Papadakis. Taylor, Beyond Learning Theory, Discussion by Patricia Daniel, Priscilla Roth. Hughes, Talking Makes Things Happen: A Contribution to the Understanding Of Patients' Use Of Speech in the Clinical Situation, Discussion by Patricia Daniel, Jane Temperley. O'Shaughnessy, A Projective Identification with Frankenstein: Some Questions About Psychic Limits, Discussion by Irma Brenman Pick, Robin Anderson. Papadakis, To Defy the Fates; Doubt as an Expression of Envy, Discussion by Ignes Sodré. Joseph, Epilogue.

    15 in stock

    £37.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Containing States of Mind: Exploring Bion's

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisWilfred Bion’s insights into the analytic process have had a profound influence on how psychoanalysts and psychotherapists understand emotional change and pathological mental states. One of his most influential ideas concerns the notion that we need the minds of others to develop our own emotional and cognitive capacities.In Containing States of Mind Duncan Cartwright explores and develops some of the implications that Bion’s container model has on clinical practice. He argues that the analyst or therapist best fulfils a containing function by negotiating irreconcilable internal tensions between his role as ‘dream object’ and ‘proper object’. The container model is also used to illustrate different ‘modes of interaction’ in the analytic field, the nature of particular pathological states and some of the key dilemmas faced in attempting to make unbearable mental states more bearable. As well as addressing key theoretical problems, Containing States of Mind is a clinical text that renders complex ideas accessible and useful for psychotherapeutic and analytic practice and as such will be essential reading for all those involved in the fields of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy. Trade Review"Bion’s concept of the "container and the contained" has become one of his most well-known and used ideas – to the point that it has become taken for granted ("saturated," in Bion’s terms). Duncan Cartwright has given this concept new life, expands upon it, and integrates it with much of Bion’s other work in innovative ways. The results are exciting. The author has expertly balanced profound and extensive scholarship with sound reasoning and with a reader-friendly style. A number of works on Bion have been published recently; this one is in my opinion one of the finest and most useful." – James Grotstein, Training and Supervising Analyst, Los Angeles Psychoanalytic Institute, USA"This is a challenging book in relation to the conceptualisation of the container-contained configuration but one that is extremely useful in developing an understanding of the dynamics and psychic processes inherent in the analytic relationship." – Journal of Analytical Psychology, Vol. 55, 2010"Bion’s concept of the "container and the contained" has become one of his most well-known and used ideas – to the point that it has become taken for granted ("saturated," in Bion’s terms). Duncan Cartwright has given this concept new life, expands upon it, and integrates it with much of Bion’s other work in innovative ways. The results are exciting. The author has expertly balanced profound and extensive scholarship with sound reasoning and with a reader-friendly style. A number of works on Bion have been published recently; this one is in my opinion one of the finest and most useful." – James Grotstein, Training and Supervising Analyst, Los Angeles Psychoanalytic Institute, USA"This is a challenging book in relation to the conceptualisation of the container-contained configuration but one that is extremely useful in developing an understanding of the dynamics and psychic processes inherent in the analytic relationship." – Journal of Analytical Psychology, Vol. 55, 2010"...this book impresses with its scholastic rigour and integration of psychoanalytic literature from diverse theoretical models. While firmly post-Kleinian (Meltzer, Bick, Tustin, Steiner, Ferro et al. are constant referents), Cartwright assimilates intersubjective psychoanalysis, Fonagy’s work on mentalization, and even Matte-Blanco’s bi-logical theory of psychic functioning, in this inspired elaboration of Bion’s work. Containing States of Mind is an impressive contribution to the psychoanalytic field and one against which subsequent books on the topic will be measured." - Gavin Ivey, Psycho-analytic Psychotherapy in South Africa, Vol. 18 No. 2 2010Table of ContentsPreface. Acknowledgements. Encountering Unbearable States of Mind. Projective Identification, Countertransference and the Containing Function. The Analyst’s Containing Mind. Polarities of the Containing Connection. Notes on Interpretation. Speculations About Proto-containing Experiences. Modes Of Interaction. Idealizing the Container. Some Aspects of Beta-mentality on Mimicry and Thinking in a Technological Age. Beta-mentality in Violent Men. The Autistic Mode in Agoraphobic Syndrome. The Dead Alive Self in Borderline States. References.

    15 in stock

    £39.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Addictive States of Mind

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis'Perversion is taken to mean different things within psychoanalytic discourse. In this book the authors view perversions, not in terms of specific behaviours, but as a type of blueprint for object relations. While perversions may involve a quest for excitement through sex, drugs or gambling, for example, the focus here is on the underlying incapacity - or indeed at times refusal - to relate to the other as separate from the self and not as a narcissistic appendage. It is the anxieties aroused by intimacy and relatedness that drive the pursuit of ecstasy and excitement. Psychoanalytic thinking can help multidisciplinary teams to stand back and respond to the addictive state of mind in humane and containing ways that are not collusive. This book thus provides rich food for thought not only for the individual practitioner but also for those responsible for shaping services for addicted individuals.' - Alessandra Lemma, from the Preface.Trade Review'"Ground-breaking" is a much over-used and abused cliche perhaps, yet it does seem the right term to describe this volume. The three editors are also significant contributors to an excellent collection of papers on some of the most recalcitrant and disturbing pathologies so often manifest in addictive states of mind. Much has been, and is being, written about the aetiology and treatment of addiction, but there is little from the coherent and enlightening perspective offered by this book. Here we have set out for the reader a comprehensive, scholarly and moving exploration of a wide spectrum of different addictive behaviours and of some of the settings in which they are clinically, that is psychotherapeutically addressed. The book also, unusually, includes work across the life-span, with chapters on infancy, young childhood and adolescence as well as adult addictive states.' - Margot Waddell, Series EditorTable of ContentsSeries Editor's Preface -- Foreword -- Introduction -- Challenges in a substance misuse service -- Parental addiction and the impact on children -- Won't they just grow out of it? Binge drinking and the adolescent process -- A neglected field -- The deprivation of female drug addicts: a case for specialist treatment -- Flying a kite: psychopathy as a defence against psychosis—observations on dual (and triple) diagnosis -- Gambling: addicted to the game -- The nature of the addiction in "sex addiction" and paraphilias -- Anorexia nervosa: addiction or not an addiction? -- In search of a reliable container: staff supervision at a drug dependency unit

    15 in stock

    £34.19

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd A Clinical Application of Bion's Concepts:

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis'In this magisterial work Paulo Sandler continues to distinguish himself as a foremost scholar on the works of Bion. Already well known for his encyclopedic zeal, this present book continues Sandler's tireless search of Bion's contributions by this noteworthy clinical application of Bion's ideasE 'A major feature of Sandler's approach to studying Bion has been to contextualise the background of Bion's assumptions. In so doing, he extensively investigates the cultural and historical antecedents, especially including the philosophical and scientific points of view. From them Sandler selects Romanticism and its dialectical relationship with the Enlightenment. Among the many characteristics of Romanticism is imagination, at best creative, but also idealisation and hyperbole. 'Sandler also discusses Bion's way of being "scientific", one notable aspect of which is his distinctive use of theories, which he distinguishes from models. 'Sandler has written another brilliant textbook on Bion's thinking that constitutes a highly useful and practical handbook on the subject.' From the foreword by James GrotsteinTable of ContentsAbout the Author -- Preface -- Extensions into the Realm of Minus -- Introduction -- The realm of Minus and the negative -- Clinical sources -- The hypothesis: a versus link -- Here and Now -- Bion’s Trilogy and its reception -- Analytic Function -- Bion’s contributions to the formulation of analytic function -- An analytic “compass” and “sextant” -- “Binocular vision” and the practice of psychoanalysis -- “Geography” to detect triadic syndromes -- An anti-alpha function

    15 in stock

    £34.19

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Distance Psychoanalysis: The Theory and Practice

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisMany analysts around the world have found themselves in a situation of continuing (or even beginning) psychoanalytic treatment from a distance - either by telephone or other means of communication. No one has found the courage, however, to recognize this as a formal method, as Ricardo Carlino does in this brave, honest, and rigorous book. Freud's ingenious structure of the couch and chair was considered to be the only suitable format for more than one hundred years. Carlino's lucid book takes into account the changes that have taken place in our daily lives, as the result of the resounding technological changes that have influenced our means of communication. Carlino has had the courage to assimilate the changes that have come about in the modern world and argues that Freud's psychoanalytic method can continue to be applied in this new setting. The analytic system, with a patient freely associating his/her occurrences, together with an analyst who listens in silence and communicates his/her interpretation, has remained unaltered.Table of ContentsDistance Psychoanalysis , , About the Author , Prologue for the Spanish Edition , Introduction , Socio-Cultural transformations , Technology and its influence on subjectivity , Communication technology and its articulation with clinical psychoanalysis , Theory of the technique of distance psychoanalysis , Scope and limits of analysis carried out with communication technology , Clinical anecdotes , Clinical psychoanalysis carried out in written form , Public and private law considerations of distance psychoanalysis 1 , Epilogue

    15 in stock

    £34.19

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd On Freud's On Beginning the Treatment

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisLike his other papers on technique, Freud's 1913 essay "On beginning the treatment" had an enduring influence on psychoanalysts for generations to come, providing them with a solid and worldwide-accepted conceptual basis on how to initiate psychoanalytic treatments. After a century of clinical experience and theoretical research, are all of Freud's rules and advice still valid today?Christian Seulin and Gennaro Saragnano have asked ten eminent analysts to comment upon this seminal paper of Freud's, each of them focusing on one of the fundamental issues originally propounded by the "father of psychoanalysis". The result is an overall and careful view on the actuality of the technical bases of analysis, in what can be considered a good introduction to contemporary psychoanalytic theory and practice.Trade ReviewOn beginning the treatment (1913) is one of the most important of Freud's technical articles, a theme he examined between 1904 and 1918. This text, which sets out the basis of the treatment and the conditions of psychoanalysis, still provides a solid reference for the analytic practice. Far from a group of rigid rules, Freud spoke of the technique as an art, thinking always of the singularity of each case, even if the fundamental methods of free association and suspended attention specify the psychoanalytical method that differentiates it from the suggestion. In this book, ten eminent analysts, coming from different schools of psychoanalytic thought, confront the contemporary technical proposals to the freudian precepts. The book reexamines, in the light of the latest advances in the analytic practice, such important questions as: the conditions of starting an analysis today; tranference and associativity; the play of the person of the analyst and intersubjectivity; the fundamental rule enunciation in contemporary practice; the conditions and functions of the interpretation; and the energetic drives in action during the treatment.Contributors:Alice Becker Lewkowicz, Hugo Bleichmar, Marie-France Dispaux, Antonino Ferro, Theodore Jacobs, Lewis A. Kirshner, Sergio Lewkowicz, Norberto Marucco, Patrick Miller, Rene Roussillon, Gennaro Saragnano, Christian Seulin, Rogelio Sosnik'The original title in German of this seminal work, in its full version, was reproposed as it was in the English translation by Joan Riviere of 1924. Subsequently, it was shortened in the version for the Standard Edition: On Beginning the Treatment", as Strachey explains in his presentation of the Freudian text, was the first part of a trilogy that included The Question of the First Communications and The Dynamics of the Cure. Seeing it as a trilogy that goes beyond the beginning of the treatment returns the work to its original importance. Although Freud protects himself by using the metaphor of the game of chess, his "recommendations" (not rules) lay the bases for what today we still consider to be the fundamental characteristics of the psychoanalytical method. All the circumstances - and there are several - that advise us not to ask for "any unconditional acceptance" of the recommendations, do not prevent the author from establishing a procedure "to set in motion a process". In psychoanalysis, everything is played out between these two elements: the method and the process, i.e. the instruments that set in motion the process and the process itself. The reader of this book will find that the authors of the various chapters have carefully explored the possibilities offered by a contemplation of the method that crosses Freud's entire life until chapter VI of An Outline of Psychoanalysis. Only by working hard on the method and its raisons d'etre will we be able in the future - as we were in the past - to broaden the therapeutic possibilities of psychoanalysis.'- Jorge Canestri, MD, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, training and supervising analyst for the Italian Psychoanalytic Association and for the Argentine Psychoanalytic AssociationTable of ContentsContemporary Freud -- Introduction -- "On beginning the treatment" (1913c) -- Discussion of "On beginning the treatment" -- "On beginning the treatment": a contemporary view -- From past to present: what changes have occurred in the acceptance of the conditions for psychoanalytic treatment and its setting? -- Transference and associativity, psychoanalysis, and its debate with suggestion -- The person of the analyst and role of intersubjectivity in beginning the treatment -- Swimming one's way up to the fundamental rule -- How Emmy silenced Freud into analytic listening -- The work that leads to interpretation -- Interpretative function: two characters in search of meaning -- How to modify the unconscious: a transformational—modular approach and its implications for psychoanalytic psychotherapy -- Conflicting forces: on the beginning of the treatment 1

    15 in stock

    £35.14

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd In the Traces of our Name: The Influence of Given

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe book is grounded in psychoanalytic thinking, but it is also placed at an intersection of several fields of thought: linguistics, anthropology and literature. The focus of the book is the primary importance for the constitution of the child's subjectivity of the first or second names chosen by the parents, the scaffolding of the child's future identity and a legacy offered and attributed to children by those who precede them. This book is above all the result of psychoanalytic reflection developed through the clinical work of a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst of children and adolescents.Trade Review'When we wish to preserve our patients' anonymity, we refer to them as Mr or Mrs X or we call them an imaginary given name - Hans or Dora, for example - as if a false first name could replace the proper name without consequences. Psychoanalysts have written a good deal about the influence of the patronym but very little about that of the given name. We must be grateful to J. E. Tesone for dedicating an original and very well documented study to a subject that actually calls upon us in every psychoanalytic cure. His great clinical experience and double Argentine and French culture enable him to address this theme with high clinical finesse and all the wealth of his cultural sources. This work offers its reader a goldmine of reflections that can easily be applied to clinical practice and to a deeper understanding of the effects of transmissions of family symbolism.'- Professor Daniel Widlocher, full member of the French Psychoanalytical Association, past-President of the International Psychoanalytical Association'An excellent review of the meaning and function of names in different cultures, religions, and through literature. The impact of the name gives body to the being and to the road of life in a context of social security. What occurs with the name in a context of sociopolitical violence that attacks the being, tries to erase it, to scratch it out and make its traces disappear, to change the naming or to not name at all? The psychoanalytic viewpoint accompanies the whole itinerary of this exciting exploration.'- Professor Yolanda Gampel, full member, Israel Psychoanalytic Society'Although the interest of the subject of the "name" presented by Tesone is multiple, I also consider it an essential element of what we [Willy and Madeleine Baranger] wish to emphasize as the notion of "field" in analytic relations. It is precisely this fact that is implicitly and explicitly exemplified in the cases in this highly interesting book.'- Madeleine Baranger, full member, Argentine Psychoanalytic AssociationTable of ContentsPsychoanalytic Ideas and Applications Series -- Foreword -- Introduction -- Why do we name? -- Some historical and cultural considerations with regard to naming -- The meaning of names in different cultures -- Naming in the Old Testament -- Giving a name: is it imperative to name a newborn child? -- From the name's determining force to its signifying force -- Freud and names -- The name in literature -- State terrorism in Argentina and children seized by the military power (1976–1983) -- The given name in psychoanalytical clinical work

    15 in stock

    £35.14

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Freud in Zion: Psychoanalysis and the Making of

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisFreud in Zion tells the story of psychoanalysis coming to Jewish Palestine/Israel. In this ground-breaking study psychoanalyst and historian Eran Rolnik explores the encounter between psychoanalysis, Judaism, Modern Hebrew culture and the Zionist revolution in a unique political and cultural context of war, immigration, ethnic tensions, colonial rule and nation building.Based on hundreds of hitherto unpublished documents, including many unpublished letters by Freud, this book integrates intellectual and social history to offer a moving and persuasive account of how psychoanalysis permeated popular and intellectual discourse in the emerging Jewish state.Trade Review'Eran Rolnik's work is a story of psychoanalysis and a story of Israel. Unsparing in intellectual honesty Freud in Zion exemplifies the project undertaken as the name "psychoanalysis". Great works of history are always moving. Recollections of things past is inevitably a matter of intense passion redolent with spiritual potential. We return to Freud many times, but Rolnik has us return to psychoanalysis as it moved East, a deeply compelling reading of the migration of ideas.'- Christopher Bollas'A rare combination of historiographic discipline and deep grasp of psychoanalytic thinking. This work is a significant contribution to analysts' increasing their knowledge of how their specific institutions developed and how science in general unfolds.'- Warren Poland'One of the best books on the history of psychoanalysis that has been written in the last twenty years. Everybody interested in the history of psychoanalysis and in the cultural and social role that our discipline can play in the world should read and make use of this book.'- Riccardo Steiner'"Know thyself" is a Greek injunction. The Jews countered it with a different one that could be phrased "Learn thy God". When manifestly secular Jews such as Freud and his colleagues adopted the Greek ideal and meticulously developed around it an original theory and practice, the question of their Jewish identities did not remain external to their activity. Dr Eran Rolnik has written a wonderfully valuable book about the way these two ideals play off against one another. The reader of his original and inspired study will come to understand why psychoanalysis still plays an important role in current Israeli experience.' - A. B. YehoshuaTable of ContentsSeries Editor’s Foreword , Preface , Introduction: a costly dream , The Freudians and the “new man” of the Zionist revolution , Psychoanalytic pioneers and their discontents , We’ve lost Berlin , Migration and interpretation , Homegrown psychoanalysis , A psychoanalytic midrash , Epilogue: dynamite in the house

    15 in stock

    £34.19

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Transforming Clinical Practice Using the MindBody Approach: A Radical Integration

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book assumes that it is no longer tenable to work in healthcare without considering the person as a whole being constituted by a rich weaving of mind, body, culture, family, spirit and ecology. The MindBody approach embraces this 'whole.' But how does it transform clinical practice and training for the clinician and treatment for the patient/client? The book collects together the experiences from a diverse range of clinical practitioners (including psychotherapy, specialist medicine, general practice, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, dietetics, , nursing, and complementary and alternative medicine practitioners) who have deliberately chosen to integrate a MindBody philosophy and skill set in their clinical practices. All reflect deeply on their unique journeys in transforming their clinical encounters. Most have been trained in the dominant Western framework and have inherited the classical dualistic approach which typically keeps mind and body apart. This dualistic clinical ethos values clinician expertise, labeling, diagnosis, measurement, and grouped phenomena. The MindBody approach retains the best of the classical model as well as valuing personal experience, patient/client story, the unique patterning of the individual's illness and disease, and the healing elements of the relationship between the clinician and the patient/client. The MindBody transformation of the clinician is a challenging journey, and each clinician experiences this uniquely. From these stories the reader can see vividly the ways in which conventional healthcare can break out of its current restrictive paradigm creating new satisfaction for the clinicians and much wider treatment outcomes for patients and clients.Trade Review'Brian Broom is an experienced and well-published medical clinician-researcher who is a pioneer in advocating what he calls the "MindBody" approach to healing "physical" disease. Dr Broom has taken a bold and perhaps unprecedented step: negotiating the establishment in a conventional academic health centre, by offering a training program in the MindBody approach for health-care workers from a variety of medical and non-medical backgrounds. His book is a fascinating collection, from a number of these students, of their own experiences in learning how to do MindBody medicine. The result is a collection of frank, moving and philosophically sophisticated accounts that will be compelling reading for any therapist, and particularly for those health professionals endeavouring to treat chronic medical conditions within a system of medicine that rarely looks beyond the mechanics of the body. It might well inspire a whole new generation of therapists.'- Alastair J. Cunningham, OC, PhD, Cpsych, Professor Emeritus, University of Toronto, author of The Healing Journey; Bringing Spirituality into your Healing Journey and Can the Mind Heal Cancer?'This book is like a wonderful bouquet of flowers. The variety is one pleasure, but another pleasure is the bouquet itself.'- Andrea Enders, Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, Medical Care Center for Gynaekology, Endokrinology and Reproduction Medicine, guest-physician, Department of Dermatology, Charite Berlin'These fascinating stories shine with honesty. In some, there is brave disclosure of personal stories, as well as a strongly felt message of care for the client. The transition to a whole person, MindBody approach, especially for those only recently exposed to this way of being, has not been easy, but is powerfully felt to be worthwhile by all who have written. I have witnessed not only benefits to patients from this approach but also the struggles of some of the practitioners on this journey. I wholeheartedly commend this moving book to any health care or education practitioner interested in developing a more whole person approach to clients, whatever their area of practice.'- Penny F. Fitzharris MB, ChB, MD, FRACP, FRCP Clinical Director, Department of Immunology, Auckland City Hospital, Auckland, New Zealand'Through the stories of health professionals from many walks of life, we learn how some clinicians are adapting their practice to attend to patients as whole persons. Clinical vignettes describe how MindBody therapy can be successful in helping patients left behind by organ-centered care. This book offers an intimate view of these clinician's individual journeys, and offers inspiration that better care and a better experience for patients is possible in the real world.'- Christopher A. Kenedi, MD, MPH, FRACP, FACP, Consultant Physician and Psychiatrist, Departments of General Medicine and Liaison Psychiatry, Auckland City Hospital, Auckland, New ZealandTable of ContentsIntroduction: transforming clinical practice using the MindBody approach , The Kafka beetle goes off his food , An intimate field , Bodies in conversation , The proof is in the pudding , The gift of illness: inviting physical symptoms to guide personal growth , Professional earthquake and aftershocks , From fearing to caring: finding heart in nursing , Touching the hurt , Issues in the tissues , There is always “something else”: phenomenological physiotherapy , Whakawhanaungatanga: establishing relationships , Making a difference: a narrative MindBody approach to school guidance counselling , Becoming an intimate lecturer , Healing through talk and touch , Holding it all together: integrating the MindBody approach as a breast cancer patient , Transforming a pain clinic: using patient stories to integrate medical practice , Training “troops” for a MindBody revolution

    15 in stock

    £33.24

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Racist States of Mind: Understanding the

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisRacism is a treacherous phenomenon with many faces that allow it a remarkable capacity to co-exist with support for ethnic and cultural diversity. In both its subtle and virulent forms, racist states of mind reveal a bewildering mix of anxieties, feelings and fantasies about the real complexities of life and living that a recognition of difference and diversity can potentially bring forth. These are often expressed in a nostalgic gaze that is infused with a toxic interplay of grievance, murderous rage, and vengeful feelings and fantasies that have resulted from a real or imagined narcissistic injury to the self, group, or nation. In a racist state of mind grief and mourning for such losses are replaced by manic omnipotent states which aim to triumph over feelings of powerlessness through an inflated sense of self that claims superiority over others who are made to become the bearers of inadequacy or inferiority. The compensatory excitements of hatred, cruelty, and violence can lead to a collapse of a triangular mental space that damages the capacity for curiosity and concern for others. The tragic consequences of this psychic assault is a rupture at the very core of identity and the self which aims to thwart the desires and emotional freedom of others. In this book the author explores the quality of thinking in racist states of mind and suggests that the fantasy dramas of the primal scene provide an essential framework in which racial and racist fantasies exist as deep structures of thought and feeling. These are intrinsic to psychic life and functioning, universally present in contemporary culture as well as the consulting room where they constitute the passions of the transference. The author explores the predicaments and challenges of engaging with these states of mind in the consulting room, group, organisational, and societal life.Trade Review'This is a wonderfully lucid, accessible and profound book. Keval's understanding of racist mindsets - the "racist scene" is, for him, a variant of the primal scene, saturating it with complex layers of meaning - brings clarity and depth to a topic that is easily bogged down in hatred or political correctness. This understanding, deployed with sensitivity and compassion in the face of racist phenomena in the consulting room and elsewhere, counteracts racism's malignant power, restoring freedom - of thought and feeling - and authenticity. His voice is an eloquent riposte to the bigotry contained in Enoch Powell's "Rivers of blood" speech, aimed as it was at the likes of him. It is a triumph of human compassion and reason over the forces of racialised hatred. The sensitivity and breadth of his clinical observations, and clarity of thought, make this book required reading for professionals working across boundaries of ethnicity in today's multicultural world.'--M. Fakhry Davids, Training and Supervising Analyst, British Psychoanalytical Society, and author of Internal Racism: A Psychoanalytic Approach to Race and Difference'This book examines aspects of racism and ethnic problems in individuals, organisations and societies and offers a theory about why we all have the potential to have prejudice against the Other. Psychotherapists and psychoanalysts, in general, have not given the necessary attention to external events related to race and ethnicity. At the present time incredible advances in communication technology and global awareness are taking place while voluntary and forced migrations create major headaches and heartbreaks. I consider Keval's book to be most helpful in increasing our interest and our ability to examine the psychology of how external and internal worlds intertwine.'--Vamik D. Volkan, Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry, University of Virginia, and the author of Psychoanalysis, International Relations, and Diplomacy: A Sourcebook on Large-Group PsychologyTable of ContentsA Note Regarding Pronouns -- Introduction -- The Psychic Geography of Racism -- Mythical homelands: body, psyche, and nation -- The racist scene and the primal scene -- Race in the Consulting Room -- Working clinically with racist states of mind -- The racist gaze: bearing witness -- Clinical and theoretical challenges -- Race in Group, Organisation, and Societal Life -- Psychoanalysis and the psychotherapies: institutional cleansing -- Race in the life of a study group -- Consulting to an organisation: race, food, sex, and aggression -- Reason and racism -- Thinking under fire: concluding thoughts

    15 in stock

    £24.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Lacan - The Unconscious Reinvented: The

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisHas Jacques Lacan's impact on psychoanalysis really been assessed? His formulation that the Freudian unconscious is "structured like a language" is well-known, but this was only the beginning. There was then the radically new thesis of the "real unconscious". Why this step?Searching for the Ariadne's thread that runs throughout Lacan's ever-evolving teaching, this book illuminates the questions implicit in each step, and sheds new light on his revisions and renewals of psychoanalytic concepts. In tracing these, Colette Soler brings out their consequences for the clinic, and in particular, for the subject, for symptoms, for affects, and for the aims of treatment itself. The last section of the book examines the political import of these developments.If many analysts since Freud have dreamt of reinventing psychoanalysis, Colette Soler shows the ways in which Lacan succeeded in this reinvention.Table of ContentsIntroduction -- The Unconscious, Real -- Trajectory -- Towards the Real -- Lalangue, traumatic -- From the transference towards the other unconscious -- The royal road to the RUCS -- The Borromean aleph -- The parlêtre -- Analysis Oriented Towards the Real -- The end pass -- The time that isn’t logical -- Terminable analysis -- Identification with the symptom or … worse -- The identity at the end, its aporias -- A Renewed Clinic -- The status of jouissances -- Symptom of the real unconscious -- The father and the Real -- Towards the father of the name -- Love and the Real -- Political Perspectives -- Dissidence of the symptom? -- Psychoanalysis and capitalism -- Malaise in psychoanalysis -- What does the psychoanalyst want?

    15 in stock

    £33.24

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The God of the Left Hemisphere: Blake, Bolte

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe God of the Left Hemisphere explores the remarkable connections between the activities and functions of the human brain that writer William Blake termed 'Urizen' and the powerful complex of rationalising and ordering processes which modern neuroscience identifies as 'left hemisphere' brain activity. The book argues that Blake's profound understanding of the human brain is finding surprising corroboration in recent neuroscientific discoveries, such as those of the influential Harvard neuro-anatomist Jill Bolte Taylor, and it explores Blake's provocative supposition that the emergence of these rationalising, law-making, and 'limiting' activities within the human brain has been recorded in the earliest Creation texts, such as the Hebrew Bible, Plato's Timaeus, and the Norse sagas. Blake's prescient insight into the nature and origins of this dominant force within the brain allows him to radically reinterpret the psychological basis of the entity usually referred to in these texts as 'God'.The book draws in particular on the work of Bolte Taylor, whose study in this area is having a profound impact on how we understand mental activity and processes. Bolte Taylor was listed as one of Time Magazine's 100 Most Influential People in 2008 and her book recounting her research into left and right brain activity spent seventeen weeks in the New York Times best-seller list. The God of the Left Hemisphere also dovetails in many exciting and provocative ways with Iain McGilchrist's recent study of the impact of brain lateralisation on human culture in The Master and his Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World (2009). It is significant in this respect that McGilchrist also sees Blake's figure of Urizen as an 'instantiation of the left hemisphere take on the world'.In the second part of the book the author extends Blake's understanding of Urizenic activities and functions into a broader discussion concerning the place of both religion and rationality in contemporary culture. In particular, he examines Blake's contention that whilst religion and rationalistic science are supposed to be at loggerheads, symptomatic of a 'two cultures' divide, what they resemble more are different (or rival) versions of essentially similar systems of thoughts ('R1' and 'R2'). In order to clarify the nature of this relationship the author updates Blake's original imagery of mills and machinery to denote Urizenic processes and employs instead the more modern metaphor of rival operating systems, battling it out for supremacy of the left brain. Blake's presentation of Urizen as the 'Holy Reasoning Power' succinctly captures what he saw as the underlying rationalizing processes of orthodox religion as well as the religious and largely unconscious nature of much post-Newtonian science.Trade Review'Absolutely fascinating - in fact both revelatory and thrilling.' - Philip Pullman, author of His Dark Materials, and President of the Blake Society'Blake's thought cries out to be understood in the light of cerebral asymmetry. This is a highly original and stimulating book, the best I have read on one of the greatest of English poets.' - Iain McGilchrist, author of The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World'This is a book to go on every Romantics reading list - a marvellous exposition of Blake's thought and writing. But it is also a deeply wise book, from which every one can learn something that might change their lives.'- Lucy Newlyn, Professor of English Language and Literature at Oxford University, and author of Reading, Writing, and Romanticism: The Anxiety of Reception and William and Dorothy Wordsworth: All in Each Other'Roderick Tweedy's book makes salutary reading and shows why Blake's work is not solely a matter of historical interest but also has an important contribution to make to our contemporary intellectual life as well as our pedagogy.'- Professor Christopher Rowland, Dean Ireland's Professor of the Exegesis of Holy Scripture at the University of Oxford, and author of Blake and the Bible'The book is, in its exhilaratingly wide-ranging scope, reminiscent of Freud's late work - ambitious and meta-theory building. - Nigel Barrow, The Bulletin Book Review (2014), Association of Child Therapists'A fascinating book, which unearths amazing parallels between the poetry of William Blake and modern neuroscience. This book shows that Blake's poetry was even more insightful and prophetic than previously thought. At the same time, the book is a very enlightening examination of the pathology of the human psyche, and the pathological culture it has given rise to, offering urgent suggestions on how a new self - and a new world - may come into being.' - Steve Taylor, author of The Fall: The Insanity of the Ego in Human History and the Dawning of a New Era and Back to Sanity: Healing the Madness of our Minds'I found this book profoundly engaging, through its thesis that both individually and collectively humans in our social systems have privileged left hemisphere functioning (information processing, domination, atomising, rationalising, and mechanising) over more imaginative and intuitive apprehensions of reality, involving creativity and the discovery of meaning. This book promotes a form of learning that stimulates the growth of connections between the two cerebral hemispheres of the brain and allows people greater access to their creative, intellectual and emotional selves.'- Dr. Mannie Sher, Director of the Group Relations Programme and Principal Researcher and Consultant at the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations, and author of The Dynamics of Change: Tavistock Approaches to Improving Social Systems'Exhilarating reading' - Steff Oates, Review in The Transactional Analyst (Winter 2013/14)'This is an important book in finally understanding Blake's astonishing insights into the human brain and his ability not only to deduce function but to also locate areas of functionality structurally. Dr. Tweedy's work is exceptionally erudite and compelling. He brings the subject to life and I expect this work will have a profound impact on Blake studies. I highly recommend this work.'- John C. Espy, member of the American Academy of Psychotherapists, the American Association for Psychoanalysis in Clinical Social Work, former neurotoxicologist with NASA, and author of the acclaimed trilogy Eat The Evidence.Table of ContentsPreface , Introduction , The Looking-Glass , The origins of Urizen , Urizen and the left hemisphere , The myth of Genesis , The marriage of heaven and hell , Down the Rabbit-Hole , The God of reason , Urizenic religion and Urizenic reason: R1 and R2 , The left hemisphere agenda , Twilight of the psychopaths , More than man: the dragon Urizen , The Selfhood & the fires of Los , Conclusion , Appendix

    15 in stock

    £35.14

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Freud's On Narcissism: An Introduction

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisOn Narcissism: An Introduction is a densely packed essay dealing with ideas that are still being debated today - from the role of narcissism in normal and pathological development and the relationship of narcissism to homosexuality, libido, romantic love, and self-esteem to issues of therapeutic intervention. The contributors place the work in the context of Freud's evolving thinking, point out its innovations, review its problematic aspects, and examine how its theoretical concepts have been elaborated more recently by analysts of diverse theoretic persuasions. In addition, they use Freud's text to chart new developments in psychoanalysis and point toward still unresolved problems. An introduction by Joseph Sandler, Ethel Spector Person, and Peter Fonagy provides a succinct overview of the material.Contributors: Willy Baranger, David Bell, R. Horacio Etchegoyen, Peter Fonagy, Leon Grinberg, Bela Grunberger, Heinz Henseler, Otto F. Kernberg, Paul H. Ornstein, Ethel Spector Person, Joseph Sandler, Hanna Segal, Nikolaus Treurniet, Clifford YorkeTable of ContentsPreface , Introduction , On Narcissism: An Introduction (1914) , On Narcissism: An Introduction , Discussion of “On Narcissism: An Introduction” , Freud’s “On Narcissism”: A Teaching Text , “On Narcissism: An Introduction”: Text and Context , Introduction to “On Narcissism” , Letter to Sigmund Freud , Narcissism in Freud , A Contemporary Reading of “On Narcissism” , The Theory of Narcissism in the Work of Freud and Klein , From Narcissism to Ego Psychology to Self Psychology , Narcissism as a Form of Relationship , Narcissism and the Analytic Situation

    15 in stock

    £33.24

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Psychic Reality in Context: Perspectives on

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book skillfully combines autobiographical stories with clear psychoanalytical theories. During her childhood, the author experienced the Holocaust and was left understandly traumatised by it. It was her desire to confront this trauma that led her to psychoanalysis. For decades, the coherence of psychoanalysis seemed to be threatened by the conflicting thinking of many psychoanalytical colleagues about trauma and trauma affect, and also about the influence of external reality on the psychic reality discovered by Freud. However, Marion Oliner counters this potential conflict with her innovative theoretical integration, combined with remarkable conceptual outcomes and treatment techniques.This book spans the author's work over the last fifteen years on the impact of external reality on psychic reality. During this period many analysts, especially in the English-speaking countries and Germany, where historic events loomed large in the lives of their patients, have turned from the exclusive emphasis on psychic reality to greater attention to the traumatic impact of external reality. Considering that this has led to a body of psychoanalytic writings in which events are used to give a name to the pathology, incest survivor, Holocaust survivor, transmission of trauma, to name a few, it has implicitly created two categories of patients: patients who, because of their failed solutions for conflict, are regarded as active agents in their own suffering, and those who are victimized by events they endured passively; thus implicitly taking away from the second group the focus on conflicting motivations. This in turn has led to the adoption of some of Freud's concepts that lack a dynamic dimension. First among those is the repetition compulsion which supposedly causes events to be repeated because they happened. The concept has its place, but, if not properly understood, risks by-passing the analysis of unconscious guilt as a motivating factor in repetition. These factors have not been sufficiently explored in the analytic literature, and over the years the author has written a number of articles that try to distinguish important elements that contribute to the psychoanalytic exploration of trauma. This book is an important summation and further development of that work.Trade Review'Marion Oliner has written an enormously useful clinical book with innumerable insights on trauma and its psychoanalytic treatment. The careful distinctions she draws are exciting to the dormant thinkers in us who have perhaps been too content to accept current fashion, yet the book is also wise and moving. Challenging many of the current views on trauma and its psychoanalytic conceptualisations, she combines logical incisiveness, acquired in long years of studying psychoanalytic theory, with insight on trauma, acquired both in psychoanalytic practice and first-hand as a Jewish child born in Germany and caught up in the chaos and danger of Hitler's reign. Her clinical experience and her unceasing efforts as a psychoanalytic patient to understand the impact on herself of her wartime suffering and losses allow us to appreciate, from a new perspective, the need to separate the state in which the individual meets danger and survives it from the memories of the trauma that later emerge and from the empathic state of a listener to those memories. Such distinctions provide a background to understanding the role of omnipotence and its potentially deleterious consequences when it becomes a tool of unconscious guilt.'- Gail S. Reed, Phd.'Anything written by Marion Oliner is worth reading. Her new book contains personal, clinical, and original theoretical wisdom, and I recommend it to anyone interested in the mind and psychoanalysis.' - Leonard Shengold'This book is the admirable sum of a life. It embodies a unique combination of shattering autobiographical narration and crystal-clear psychoanalytic theorising. The author was severely traumatised as a child by the events of the Holocaust. After having survived, she found the way to psychoanalysis and a lifelong attempt at working through these experiences. During decades, the reflections of many colleagues about trauma and the effects of trauma, consequently about the reciprocal influence of external reality on psychic reality, as discovered by Freud, seemed to threaten the coherence of psychoanalysis. Marion Oliner now accomplishes an innovative theoretical integration with remarkable conceptual and technical consequences.'- Ilse Grubrich-Simitis, training analyst, German Psychoanalytical Assocation (DPV)'This landmark book conveys important insights into the nature of trauma, which I have not before seen expressed with such clarity and conviction. Traditional trauma theory can sometimes ignore the processes through which traumatic memories are subject to assimilation by unconscious fantasies. In therapy, the historic events have to be regained. As Oliner emphasises, uncovering the reworking of traumatic memories by unconscious omnipotent fantasies helps to free the patient from imagined responsibility and guilt for these traumatic events. Her two autobiographical chapters at the beginning of the book are both touching and impressive, and lend the following theoretical chapters a special note of existential reflection.'- Werner Bohleber, PhD, former President of the German Psychoanalytical Association (DPV)Table of ContentsSeries Editor’s Preface: Psychoanalytic Ideas and Applications Series , Introduction , Prologue A: Personal reflections on three analyses and their aftermath , Prologue B: Excuse me for having been born: the fate of a German Jew during the Second World War 1 , The role of historic events in treatment 1 , Actual experience, memory, and the assimilation of trauma , The elusive dimension of external reality in psychoanalytic theory , The limit of omnipotence , Life is not a dream: the importance of actual perception 1 , Conclusion: “The unconscious has eyes and can see” 1 , Psychoanalysis from a different angle: “Jacques Lacan: the language of alienation” *

    15 in stock

    £34.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Socioanalytic Methods: Discovering the Hidden in Organisations and Social Systems

    15 in stock

    Socioanalysis is the study of groups, organisations, and society using a systems psychoanalytic framework: looking beneath the surface (and the obvious) to see the underlying dynamics and how these dynamics are interconnected. This book examines several of the methodologies used in socioanalytic work. Even though the beginnings of socioanalytic investigation lay in the mid-twentieth century, a broad look across several methodologies has not been done before, despite separate publications dealing with particular methods. In addition, several new methods have been developed in recent years, which the present work incorporates.Connecting all these methods is their aim of 'tapping into' the dynamic operation of what the author calls 'the associative unconscious' within and between social systems. The associative unconscious is the unconscious at a systemic level. Each of the methods discussed in this book accesses the associative unconscious in different ways. They help bring hidden dynamics to the surface for people to see how they influence, aid, or inhibit their activities. Excitingly, they can show what we know at some level but have not yet been able to use. And, because the methods explore social systems, they can contribute to new collaborative endeavours for thinking the future.

    15 in stock

    £42.99

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd The Female Body: Inside and Outside

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book gathers together a number of cutting edge contributions about the female body, inside and out, from a large group of psychoanalysts who are at the forefront of new thinking about issues of femininity, the female body, sex and gender. It explores the female body in art, in pregnancy and motherhood, in sexuality and in the life-cycle, and finally the female body as scene of crime. As a result this book covers aspects of female creativity in its many aspects, both productive and generative and where there are difficulties or impediments. The psychoanalysts writing for this book have made an enormous contribution in the past and this book therefore aims to stimulate, challenge and provoke further discussion and new advances in this field.Trade Review'The Female Body: Inside and Outside addresses a topic that has fascinated and challenged psychoanalysis since its inception. Here, we find experienced clinicians reflecting on fertility and procreation, on maternal fantasies both generative and destructive, on the female life cycle, and on disturbances and perversions of female body and self. Several chapters focus on portrayals of female bodies in art, literature, and culture. Particularly welcome is the range of contributors from different countries, which shows how much our views of and attention to sexuality and embodiment are shaped by the psychoanalytic and cultural worlds from which we come. This volume shows us how inside and outside are both, in endlessly complex ways, part of female embodiment and its psychic representation.'- Nancy J Chodorow, PhD, training and supervising analyst, Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute, lecturer on psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Professor emerita of sociology at University of California, Berkeley, and author of several booksTable of ContentsSeries Editor’s Foreword -- Introduction -- The Female Body in Art -- The female body in Western art: adoration, attraction and horror -- How deep is the skin? Surface and depth in Lucian Freud’s female nudes -- Alberto Giacometti’s Caress/Despite the Hands: Developing and vanished life as a reversible figure—nucleus of an adequate expression of the struggle for the acknowledgment of space and time? -- Pregnancy and Motherhood -- The female cauldron: reproductive body schemata fore-grounded by infertility -- The Medea Fantasy: An evitable burden during prenatal diagnostics? Psychoanalysis, gender and medicine in dialogue -- Inside the mother’s womb: the Mother-Embryo-Dialogue -- The Body as a Scene of Crime -- The female body as cultural playground -- Wetlands (Feuchtgebiete)—or: rage, body and hysteria -- Vicissitudes of female revenge -- Sexuality and the Female Body in the Life Cycle -- Female sexuality beyond gender dichotomy -- Change and renewal in a woman’s life -- Menopause dreams -- Afterword

    15 in stock

    £35.14

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Death and Identity

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisMichel de M'Uzan has derived several innovative notions from his clinical experience that are relevant not only for the psychoanalyst's status of identity, which is sometimes dramatically shaken by his or her patient's unconscious, but also for the artist who is deeply destabilized by his act of creation, as well as for the caring person who lets him/herself be caught in the nets, as it were, of someone who is dying.Such are the extreme examples of the precarious nature of the boundaries of being in which the author discerns, not necessarily a pathological disposition, but rather an opportunity for the mind to construct itself and achieve authenticity.Through this invigorating recognition of the unconscious with the emergence, at the heart of analysis, of 'paradoxical thoughts', the experience of 'blurred frontiers' characteristic of a vacillating sense of identity, the perception of an 'every man's land' in which the analytic treatment unfolds, and the elaboration of an 'original grammar' specific to the formulation of the intervention/interpretation of the analyst during the session, Michel de M'Uzan leads us along a path that is in keeping with the purist tradition of Freudian thought, that of 'the uncanny' and its creative powers. And in so doing, he opens the way to a 'permanent sense of disquiet': 'Where ego/I is, there id/it shall be'.Trade Review'With the double, the paraphrenic twin, the spectrum of identities, the chimera, paradoxical thinking, the same and the identical, the economic scandal, the vital-identical programme, the work of dying, and other original contributions by de M'Uzan, you are entering the world of an analyst that harmoniously conjugates a refined description of the single analytic session with an encompassing view of the mind, or, more to the point, of the psyche-soma. Reading de M'Uzan offers a fresh outlook on clinical work and a refreshing perspective on the possibilities of psychoanalysis in various domains. Indeed, Michel de M'Uzan is a psychoanalyst who throughout his long career of more than fifty years has been able to build creatively on Freud's discoveries in many important domains: in psychoanalysis proper, of course, but also in psychosomatics, in his work with terminally ill patients, and in the field of artistic creation.'- Professor Dominique Scarfone, Professor at the Department of Psychology of the Universite de Montreal, and associate editor of the International Journal of PsychoanalysisTable of ContentsSeries Editor's Preface -- Preface -- From Art to Death -- The same and the identical* (1969) -- Countertransference and the paradoxical system* (1976a) -- The work of dying* (1976b) -- The Mouth of the Unconscious -- The person of myself* (1983) -- Slaves of quantity* (1984) -- During the session: considerations on the analyst’s mental functioning* (1989) -- At the Frontiers of Identity -- The paraphrenic twin or at the frontiers of identity* (1999) -- Death never confesses* (1996) -- The uncanny or "I am not who you think I am"* (2009) -- Invitation to frequent the shadows* (2006) -- Back to Object-Relations -- Object-relations: between whom, between what; for whom, for what?* (2008) -- Reconsiderations and new developments in psychoanalysis* (2011)

    15 in stock

    £34.19

  • Taylor & Francis Ltd Give Sorrow Words: Working with a Dying Child

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThough there has been much written about dying and bereavement in recent years, the particular stress of terminal illness in childhood - as it affects both the families and the professionals - is only beginning to be better understood. In this book Dorothy Judd, a child psychotherapist who has worked with ill, disabled and dying children and adolescents for many years, places her clinical experience in the context of a full understanding of death, the moral and ethical issues raised by some of the treatments for life-threatening illness, and the current research into new developments in approaches to terminal illness. At the heart of the book is a very moving diary of Judd's work with Robert, a seven-year-old suffering from leukaemia. Judd's account of therapeutic work in the hospital setting, away from the privacy of the consulting room, will be of special interest to mental health professionals. Give Sorrow Words combines great sensitivity to the experience of terminal illness with an astute awareness of the more theoretical debates in this increasingly important area of research.Trade Review'Every health-care professional looking after children with life threatening illnesses should read this book to enable them to communicate more easily with dying children and their families, to see things in a different light, and to think twice about what we sometimes put children through. Dorothy Judd's account of her work with Robert, a seven-year-old, dying after a bone marrow transplant, is compelling reading that moved me to tears. Doctors and nurses caring for children who are dying, or may die, can learn new ways of dealing with what are often intolerable situations from reading this book. Dorothy Judd's book remains as relevant today as when it was first written.'- Dr Heather Mackinnon, consultant paediatrician'This remarkable book was first published about twenty-five years ago and it is splendid that it will now be made available again. The study of children's attitudes to and understanding of death, and the nature of adult responses to the task of caring for children who may die, is illuminated by a detailed and profoundly moving diary of Dorothy Judd's work as a psychotherapist with a seven-year-old boy during the last three months of his life. The combination of careful scholarship and clinical imagination and courage displayed in the writing shows a mind at full stretch. The memorable heart of the book is her engagement with the meaning of childhood cancer to her little patient, his parents, and the doctors and nurses caring for him. No better case could be made for the unique contribution that childpsychotherapists are equipped to make in paediatric wards and particularly in specialist units, which often entail the family being at a great distance from their home.'- Margaret Rustin, Honorary Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychotherapist, Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust; Associate of the British Psychoanalytical Society'A thoughtful and thought-provoking read that provides insight into perhaps the most challenging time any parent or professional working with children is likely to encounter. Told with courage and clarity, Dorothy Judd's own personal account of caring for a dying patient in the final three months of life provides a poignant insight into how little we truly understand about how a child experiences this journey. Simultaneously, it provides an elegant summation of the published literature and offers an evidence base for how best we can support the child, their family, and staff caring for that child. This new edition remains as relevant as when it was first published over twenty-five years ago; the challenges, the emotions, and the human interactions remain as heartbreakingly real and resolutely unrelated to any recent medical advances. It is a profoundly moving, deeply humbling, and essential reading.'- Dr Sara Stoneham, Paediatric Oncology Consultant, University College Hospital, London'This is a classic text of scholarship and psychotherapy. Dorothy Judd gives us straight talk about death in childhood. Here is psychoanalysis applied without formula or mystification; that speaks to terror so that it can be seen and grasped. Besides work with children and their families, a psychotherapist must also support clinical teams, whose complex reactions are accurately described. Judd explores ethical uncertainties in terminal care, but there is no question that the practice of staff who do not have regular opportunities for confidential reflection on what they do will sooner or later suffer. This is a book that all working in hospital and hospice paediatrics should read.'- Dr Sebastian Kraemer, Consultant Psychiatrist, Paediatric Department, Whittington Hospital, London

    15 in stock

    £34.19

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