Cover image for Do I Dare Disturb the Universe? : A Memorial to W.R. Bion.
Do I Dare Disturb the Universe? : A Memorial to W.R. Bion.
Title:
Do I Dare Disturb the Universe? : A Memorial to W.R. Bion.
Author:
Grotstein, James S.
ISBN:
9781849400947
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (689 pages)
Series:
Maresfield Library
Contents:
COVER -- CONTENTS -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- Chapter 1-Wired R. Bion: The Man, The Psychoanalyst, The Mystic. A Perspective on His Life and Work -- Chapter 2-A Personal Reminiscence: Bion, Evidence of the Man -- CLINICAL CONTRIBUTIONS -- Chapter 3-On The Analyst's "Sleep" During the Psychoanalytic Session -- Chapter 4-To Practice One's Art -- Chapter 5-Bion and Babies -- Chapter 6-Toward the Experiencing of Psychic Pain -- Chapter 7-Autistic Phenomena in Neurotic Patients -- Chapter 8-Using Bion's Grid as a Laboratory Instrument: A Demonstration -- Chapter 9-The Suffocating Super-Ego: Psychotic Break and Claustrophobia -- Chapter 10-On the Psychopathology and Treatment of Psychotic Patients (Historical and Comparative Reflections) -- Chapter 11-Psychological Birth and Psychological Catastrophe -- Chapter 12-Raskolnikov's Transgression and the Confusion Between Destructiveness and Creativity -- THEORETICAL CONTRIBUTIONS -- Chapter 13-New Theories: Their Influence and Effect on Psychoanalytic Technique -- Chapter 14-A Psychosemiotic Model: An Interdisciplinary Search for a Common Structural Basis for Psychoanalysis, Symbol-Formation, and the Semiotic of Charles S . Peirce -- Chapter 15-Negation and Contradiction -- Chapter 16-The "Oedipus" as a Resistance Against the "Oedipus" in Psychoanalytic Practice -- Chapter 17-Who Is the Dreamer Who Dreams the Dream and Who Is the Dreamer Who Understands It? -- Chapter 18-The Aims of Psycho-Analytic Treatment -- Chapter 19-Philosophical Issues in Bion's Thought -- Chapter 20-Some Communicative Properties of the Bipersonal Field -- Chapter 21-Reflecting With Bion -- Chapter 22-A Note on Bion's Concept "Reversal of Alpha Function" -- Chapter 23-Cognitive Development -- Chapter 24-A Mental Atlas of the Process of Psychological Birth.

Chapter 25-The Development of the Analysands' and Analysts' Enthusiasm for the Process of Psychoanalysis -- Chapter 26-The Function of Dreams -- Chapter 27-Notes on the Desire for Knowledge -- Chapter 28-Metapsychology After Forty Years -- CONTRIBUTIONS ON GROUPS -- Chapter 29-A Study of Very Small Groups -- Chapter 30-The Individual in the Group: On Learning to Work With the Psycho-Analytic Method -- Chapter 31-Bion's Contribution to Thinking About Groups -- Chapter 32-The Influence of Wilfred Bion and the A.K. Rice Group Relations Conferences -- PUBLICATIONS BY WILFRED R. BION.
Abstract:
All the contributors to this compilation knew Bion personally and were influenced by his work. They include: Herbert Rosenfeld, Frances Tustin, Andre Green, Donald Meltzer and Hanna Segal.Wilfred R. Bion has taken his place as one of the foremost psychoanalysts of our time, yet it is only within recent years that the impact of his achievements are being felt. His death has stilled his pen and voice but demands a restatement of his view by those who have been most influenced by him. Bion's greatness lay, not only in the odd vertices of his incredible observations, but in the resources of his epistemological vastness, his respect for truth obtained in the disciplined absence of memory and desire, and his paying such scrupulous attention to and interpreting of recombinant constructions he achieved with mental elements their functions, and their transformations. His was the Language of Achievement, which is the tongue begotten by patience. Of note is his introduction of Plato's theory of forms and Kant's categories into psychoanalytic metapsychology, to say nothing of his mathematical, group and religious theories.The contributors to this memorial all knew him either as analysands, supervisees, or colleagues. Virtually all of the psychoanalysts-analysands of Melanie Klein are represented as well, bearing testimony to his importance as a pathfinder for post-Kleinian thinking, to say nothing of post-Freudian. Their contributions can be thought of as prisms which refract Bion's profound but often recondite Language of Achievement into the differentiated color spectrum of sensible meaning for clinical reflection and practice.Contributors include: Ignacio Matte Blanco, Robert H. Gosling, Andre Green, Leon Grinberg, James Grotstein, Martha Harris, Betty Joseph, Sydney Klein, Robert Langs, Isabel Menzies Lyth, Donald Meltzer, Roger Money-Kyrle, Michael

Paul, Frank Philips, Herbert Rosenfeld, Richard J. Rosenthal, Hanna Segal and Frances Tustin.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: