Cover image for Time for Change Tracking Transformations in Psychoanalyses - The Three-Level Model.
Time for Change Tracking Transformations in Psychoanalyses - The Three-Level Model.
Title:
Time for Change Tracking Transformations in Psychoanalyses - The Three-Level Model.
Author:
Altmann de Litvan, Marina.
ISBN:
9781782413080
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
London : Karnac Books, 2014.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (401 p.)
Series:
The International Psychoanalytical Association Psychoanalytic Ideas and Applications Series

The International Psychoanalytical Association Psychoanalytic Ideas and Applications Series.
General Note:
Description based upon print version of record.
Contents:
COVER; CONTENTS; ABOUT THE EDITOR AND CONTRIBUTORS; IPA PROJECT COMMITTEE ON CLINICAL OBSERVATION AND TESTING; SERIES EDITOR'S FOREWORD; FOREWORD; Introduction; PART I INTRODUCING THE THREE-LEVEL MODEL FOR OBSERVING PATIENT TRANSFORMATIONS; CHAPTER ONE The three-level model (3-LM) for observing patient transformations; CHAPTER TWO Leticia: the emergence of questions about herself; CHAPTER THREE Irina: an adolescent; PART II OBSERVING AND WORKING WITH THE 3-LM; CHAPTER FOUR Tracking patient transformations: the function of observation in psychoanalysis

CHAPTER FIVE Depression and trauma: the psychoanalysis of a patient suffering from chronic depressionCHAPTER SIX Close to observation: some reflections on the value of the three-level-model for studying change; CHAPTER SEVEN Working with the third level of the three-level model: the incidence of our theoretical model on our clinical thinking; PART III A PATIENT, A CONCEPT, AND A CASE; CHAPTER EIGHTA traumatised patient in analysis: observing patients' transformations; PART IV THE 3-LM: A CASE, REPORT, AND DISCUSSION; CHAPTER NINE Transformations in Paula with "no history"

CHAPTER TEN A report on Paula with "no history"CHAPTER ELEVEN Discussion of Paula with "no history"; PART V CLINICAL CONCEPTS; CHAPTER TWELVE Some reflections on the three-level model: organising psychoanalytic knowledge through clinical observations and generalisations; CHAPTER THIRTEEN The assessment of changes: diagnostic aspects; PART VI AN APPLICATION OF THE 3-LM AT THE END OF ANALYTIC TRAINING; CHAPTER FOURTEEN The three-level model in psychoanalytic training; CHAPTER FIFTEEN The use of the 3-LM to teach candidates to observe transformations in clinical cases

PART VII FURTHER DEVELOPMENTS OF THE 3-LM IN CHILD ANALYSISCHAPTER SIXTEEN Three-level model for observing child patient transformations; APPENDIX I Brief guidelines: IPA clinical observation groups; APPENDIX II Clinical observation group, San Francisco (CO-SF1), May-August 2012; APPENDIX III Suggested questions for group discussion; APPENDIX IV Forms to be used before and after the group discussion; APPENDIX V Clinical observation work groups (2011-2013); INDEX
Abstract:
How can we, analysts, evaluate whether analysis is generating transformations in our patients? Time for Change: Tracking Transformations in Psychoanalyses. The Three-Level Model focuses on the question of how to observe changes in psychoanalysis. The IPA Project Committee on Clinical Observation and Testing offers a tool, a heuristic, or a guide for refining, conceptualizing, and systematizing clinical observations about patient transformations: The Three-Level Model for Observing Patient Transformations (3-LM). It seeks to enhance clinical observations, making them more accurate and more usef.
Holds: Copies: