Cover image for From Id to Intersubjectivity : Talking about the Talking Cure with Master Clinicians.
From Id to Intersubjectivity : Talking about the Talking Cure with Master Clinicians.
Title:
From Id to Intersubjectivity : Talking about the Talking Cure with Master Clinicians.
Author:
Kenny, Dianna T.
ISBN:
9781782411833
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (395 pages)
Contents:
COVER -- CONTENTS -- ABOUT THE AUTHOR AND THE PSYCHOTHERAPISTS -- FOREWORD -- CHAPTER ONE Where the talking began: the birth of psychoanalysis -- CHAPTER TWO Beyond Freud's psychoanalysis -- CHAPTER THREE Dr Ron Spielman: object relations psychoanalysis -- CHAPTER FOUR Professor Jeremy Holmes: attachment-informed psychotherapy -- CHAPTER FIVE Dr Robert D. Stolorow: intersubjective, existential, phenomenological psychoanalysis -- CHAPTER SIX Professor Allan Abbass: intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy -- CHAPTER SEVEN Historical continuity and discontinuity in the meaning of key psychoanalytic concepts as revealed in the transcripts of interview -- CHAPTER EIGHT Commentaries on the transcript of an analytic session -- CHAPTER NINE Textual and conceptual analysis of psychotherapists' commentaries on the transcript of the analytic session -- Conclusion: one tree, many branches? -- NOTES -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.
Abstract:
Psychoanalysis has moved a long way from the techniques of classical psychoanalysis but these changes have not been understood or disseminated to the wider community. Even university scholars and students of psychology have an archetypal view of the original form of psychoanalysis and do not appreciate that major changes have occurred.This book commences with a detailed outline of the origins of psychoanalysis and an explanation of key terms, which are often misinterpreted. The second chapter examines the changes that have occurred in theorising and practice over the past 120 years and explores key developments. The following chapters contain an interview with a practitioner working in one of each of the four major branches of modern psychoanalysis - object relations, attachment informed psychotherapy, intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy, and relational and intersubjective theory. There follows textual, content, conceptual, and thematic analyses of the transcripts of interviews and commentaries on a therapy excerpt exploring commonalities and differences among these theoretical approaches. The book closes with a consideration of how these differences translate into clinical practice.This book aims to appeal to a wide audience, including clinical practitioners, students of psychology and psychotherapy, the informed lay public, and those thinking about commencing an analysis.
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.
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