Analyst-Patient Interaction

Analyst-Patient Interaction
Title Analyst-Patient Interaction PDF eBook
Author Michael Fordham
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 225
Release 2003-09-02
Genre Psychology
ISBN 113480721X

Download Analyst-Patient Interaction Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Michael Fordham was a friend of Jung, made many major contributions to analytical psychology. This volume brings together his key writings on analytical technique. They are important because they have shaped and informed analytical technique as we find it today. These writings will be welcomed by both trainee and practising analysts.

Analyst-Patient Interaction

Analyst-Patient Interaction
Title Analyst-Patient Interaction PDF eBook
Author Michael Fordham
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 422
Release 2003-09-02
Genre Psychology
ISBN 1134807201

Download Analyst-Patient Interaction Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Michael Fordham was a friend of Jung, made many major contributions to analytical psychology. This volume brings together his key writings on analytical technique. They are important because they have shaped and informed analytical technique as we find it today. These writings will be welcomed by both trainee and practising analysts.

The Patient's Impact on the Analyst

The Patient's Impact on the Analyst
Title The Patient's Impact on the Analyst PDF eBook
Author Judy L. Kantrowitz
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 296
Release 2013-05-13
Genre Psychology
ISBN 1134892225

Download The Patient's Impact on the Analyst Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The question of how psychoanalysts are affected by their patients is of perennial interest. Edward Glover posed the question in an informal survey in 1940, but little came of his efforts. Now, more than half a century later, Judy Kantrowitz rigorously explores this issue on the basis of a unique research project that obtained data from 399 fully trained analysts. These survey responses included 194 reported clinical examples and 26 extended case commentaries on analyst change. Kantrowitz begins The Patient's Impact on the Analyst by documenting how the process of analysis fosters an interactional process out of which patient and analyst alike experience therapeutic effects. Then, drawing on the clinical examples provided by her survey respondents, she offers a detailed exploration of the ways in which clinically triggered self-reflection represents a continuation of the analyst's own personal understanding and growth. Finally, she incorporates these research findings into theoretical reflections on how analysts obtain and integrate self-knowledge in the course of their ongoing clinical work. This book is a pioneering effort to understand the therapeutic process from the perspective of its impact on the analyst. It provides an enlarged framework of comprehension for recent discussions of self-analysis, countertransference, interaction, and mutuality in the analytic process. Combining a wealth of experiential insight with thoughtful commentary and synthesis, it will sharpen analysts' awareness of how they work and how they are affected by their work.

Emotional Communication

Emotional Communication
Title Emotional Communication PDF eBook
Author Paul Geltner
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 354
Release 2013
Genre Psychology
ISBN 0415525160

Download Emotional Communication Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This offers an integrated theory of communication, an alternative to classical, contemporary relational and inter-subjective approaches to treatment.

Progress in Self Psychology, V. 20

Progress in Self Psychology, V. 20
Title Progress in Self Psychology, V. 20 PDF eBook
Author William J. Coburn
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 306
Release 2013-07-04
Genre Psychology
ISBN 1134909659

Download Progress in Self Psychology, V. 20 Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Transformations in Self Psychology highlights the manner in which contemporary self psychology has become, in the words of series editor William Coburn, "a continuing series of revolutions within a revolution." Of special note are contributions that explore the bidirectional influences between self psychology and other explanatory paradigms. The volume begins with Stern's thoughtful attempt to integrate self-psychological and relational perspectives on transference-countertransference enactments. Fosshage and Munschauer's presentation of a case of "extreme nihilism and aversiveness" elicits a series of discussions that constructively highlights divergent perspectives on the meaning and role of enactment in treatment and on the so-called empathy/authenticity dichotomy. The productive exploration of theoretical differences also enters in the redefinition of notions of gender and sexuality, a topic of increasing interest to self psychologists. Differing perspectives, which give rise to differing clinical emphases, emerge in the exchanges of Clifford and Goldner, and of VanDerHeide and Hartmann. The special "contextualist" demands of work with intercultural couples foster a more integrative sensibility, with self-psychological borrowings from interpretive anthropology and attachment theory. Clinical contributors to Volume 20 explore manifestations of a tension that permeates all analytic work: that between the patient's newly emerging ability to expand the self in growth-consolidating ways and the countervailing dread to repeat. Enlarged by Malin's personal reflections of "Fifty Years of Psychoanalysis" and by book review essays focusing on the writings of Lachmann and Stolorow, respectively, Transformations in Self Psychology bespeaks the continuing vitality of contemporary self psychology.

The Role of the Patient-Analyst Match in the Process and Outcome of Psychoanalysis

The Role of the Patient-Analyst Match in the Process and Outcome of Psychoanalysis
Title The Role of the Patient-Analyst Match in the Process and Outcome of Psychoanalysis PDF eBook
Author Judy Leopold Kantrowitz
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 298
Release 2020-05-06
Genre Psychology
ISBN 1000062449

Download The Role of the Patient-Analyst Match in the Process and Outcome of Psychoanalysis Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Forewords by Theodore Jacobs and Donnel Stern The Role of the Patient-Analyst Match in the Process and Outcome of Psychoanalysis is a compilation of Judy Kantrowitz’s previously published papers on the patient-analyst "match" and its effect on the process and outcome of psychoanalysis. The match between patient and analyst places attention on the dynamic effect of interactions of character and conflict of both participants on the process that evolves between them—a spectrum of compatibility and incompatibility that is relevant to the analytic work. Classical psychoanalysis had been viewed as a "one-person" enterprise, with one analyst interchangeable with another. Analysts’ experiences of countertransference reactions were viewed as unresolved conflicts, reasons to return to personal treatment, not inevitable and potentially informative about the current analytic work. This view began to shift in the 1980s, with Judy Kantrowitz’s work contributing to the development of the recognition that psychoanalysis was a "two-person" process. In this collection of her most significant papers, Kantrowitz explores the importance of the match, which refers to observable styles, attitudes and personal characteristics that may be rooted in residual and unanalyzed conflicts, triggered in any patient-analyst pair. Match is neither a predictive nor static concept. Rather it refers to the unfolding transaction that itself that may shift and change during the course of analytic work. Pulling together the history of the shift in theory from the one-person to two-person understanding of the psychoanalytic enterprise, The Role of the Patient-Analyst Match in the Process and Outcome of Psychoanalysis will be of great interest to contemporary psychoanalysts.

What Do Psychoanalysts Want?

What Do Psychoanalysts Want?
Title What Do Psychoanalysts Want? PDF eBook
Author Anna Ursula Dreher
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 160
Release 2013-01-11
Genre Psychology
ISBN 1134780257

Download What Do Psychoanalysts Want? Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Defining the aims of psychoanalysis was not initially a serious complex problem. However, when Freud began to think of the aim as being one of scientific research, and added the different formulations of aim (for example, that the aim was to make the patient's unconscious conscious) it became an area of tension which affected the subsequent development of psychoanalysis and the resolution of which has profound implications for the future of psychoanalysis. In What Do Psychoanalysts Want? the authors look at the way psychoanalysts have defined analysis both here and in America, from Freud down to the present day. From this basis they set out a theory about aims which is extremely relevant to clinical practice today, discussing the issues from the point of view of the conscious and unconscious processes in the psychoanalyst's mind. Besides presenting a concise history of psychoanalysis, its conflicts and developments, which will be of interest to a wide audience of those interested in analysis, this book makes important points for the clinician interested in researching his or her practice.