Description
Book SynopsisTraditionally, two clinical models have been dominant in psychoanalysis: the classical paradigm, which views the analyst as an objective mirror, and the participant-observation paradigm, which views the analyst as an intersubjective participant-observer. This book defines coparticipant inquiry and articulates its major principles.
Table of ContentsIntroduction Coparticipation Coparticipation and Coparticipant Inquiry The Core Principles of Coparticipant Inquiry The Evolution of Coparticipant Inquiry in Psychoanalysis: A Comparative Study The Self The Multidimensional Self Clinical Dialectics of the Self Narcissism The Self and Narcissism Clinical Narcissism: Psychopathology of the Self Coparticipant Inquiry and Narcissism The Analytic Working Space Narcissistic Dynamics and Coparticipant Therapeutics: Further Considerations Explorations in Therapy Openness to Singularity: The Facilitation of Aliveness in Analysis Coparticipant Transference Analysis: Observations and Conjectures The "Living Through" Process: The Experiential and Relational Foundations of Therapeutic Action