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E-grāmata: Contemporary Freudian Tradition: Past and Present [Taylor & Francis e-book]

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"This is the first book dedicated to the Contemporary Freudian Tradition. In its introduction, and through its selection of papers, it describes the development and rich diversity of this tradition over recent decades, showing how theory and practice areinseparable in the psychoanalytic treatment of children, adolescents and adults. The book is organized around four major concerns in the Contemporary Freudian Tradition: the nature of the Unconscious and the ways that it manifests itself; the extension of Freud's theories of development through the work of Anna Freud and later theorists; the body and psychosexuality, including the centrality of bodily experience as it is elaborated over time in the life of the individual; and aggression. It also illustrates how within the Tradition different exponents have been influenced by psychoanalytic thinking outside it, whether from the Kleinian and Independent Groups, or from French Freudian thinking. Throughout the book there is strong emphasis on the clinical setting, in, for example, the value of the Tradition's approach to the complex interrelationship of body and mind in promoting a deeper understanding of somatic symptoms and illnesses and working with them. There are four papers on the subject of dreams within the Contemporary Freudian Tradition, illustrating the continuing importance accorded to dreams and dreaming in psychoanalytic treatment. This is the only book that describes in detail the family resemblances shared by those working psychoanalyticallywithin the richly diverse Contemporary Freudian Tradition. It should appeal to anyone, from student onwards, who is interested in the living tradition of Freud's work as understood by one of the three major groups within British psychoanalysis"--

This is the first book dedicated to the Contemporary Freudian Tradition. In its introduction, and through its selection of papers, it describes the development and rich diversity of this tradition over recent decades, showing how theory and practice are inseparable in the psychoanalytic treatment of children, adolescents and adults.

The book is organized around four major concerns in the Contemporary Freudian Tradition: the nature of the Unconscious and the ways that it manifests itself; the extension of Freud’s theories of development through the work of Anna Freud and later theorists; the body and psychosexuality, including the centrality of bodily experience as it is elaborated over time in the life of the individual; and aggression. It also illustrates how within the Tradition different exponents have been influenced by psychoanalytic thinking outside it, whether from the Kleinian and Independent Groups, or from French Freudian thinking. Throughout the book there is strong emphasis on the clinical setting, in, for example, the value of the Tradition’s approach to the complex interrelationship of body and mind in promoting a deeper understanding of somatic symptoms and illnesses and working with them. There are four papers on the subject of dreams within the Contemporary Freudian Tradition, illustrating the continuing importance accorded to dreams and dreaming in psychoanalytic treatment.

This is the only book that describes in detail the family resemblances shared by those working psychoanalytically within the richly diverse Contemporary Freudian Tradition. It should appeal to anyone, from student onwards, who is interested in the living tradition of Freud’s work as understood by one of the three major groups within British psychoanalysis.

About the editors and contributors xii
Previously published material xvii
1 Introduction
1(34)
Ken Robinson
Joan Schachter
2 Phantasy and its transformations: a Contemporary Freudian view
35(12)
Joseph Sandler
Anne-Marie Sandler
3 Unconscious phantasy and apres-coup: the Controversial Discussions
47(23)
Rosine Jozef Perelberg
4 The vicissitudes of preparing and sustaining a young child in psychoanalysis
70(19)
Angela Joyce
5 The oedipal experience: effects on development of an absent father
89(18)
Marion Burgner
6 Oedipus at play
107(19)
Ken Robinson
7 Female masturbation in adolescence and the development of the relationship to the body
126(12)
M. Egle Laufer
8 Modes of communication---the differentiation of somatic and verbal expression
138(17)
Rose M. Edgcumbe
9 The soma and the body: navigating through the countertransference
155(21)
Marina Perris-Myttas
10 Pregnancy, miscarriage and abortion. A psychoanalytic perspective
176(12)
Dinor A. Pines
11 Masculinity, femininity and internalization in male homosexuals
188(17)
Mervin Glasser
12 Doubt in the psychoanalysis of a paedophile
205(29)
Donald Campbell
13 "I'm like a shattered windscreen": struggles with sadism and the self
234(17)
Marianne Parsons
14 The patient's discovery of the psychoanalyst as a new object
251(18)
Ronald Baker
15 The dream space, the analytic situation and the eating disorder: clinging to the concrete
269(18)
Sara Flanders
16 The fate of the dream in contemporary psychoanalysis
287(22)
Susan Loden
17 How come your house does not fall down?
309(19)
Luis Rodriguez De La Sierra
18 Measure for measure: unconscious communication in dreams
328(15)
Joan Schachter
19 Regression, curiosity and the discovery of the object
343(20)
Rosemary Davies
Name index 363(3)
Subject index 366
Joan Schächter trained as a psychiatrist before training as a psychoanalyst in the British Psychoanalytic Institute. She worked a consultant psychotherapist in the NHS for many years. Since retiring from the NHS she works in private psychoanalytic practice.

Ken Robinson works as a psychoanalyst in private practice in Newcastle upon Tyne. He is a member of the British Psychoanalytical Society, Honorary Member of the Polish Society for Psychoanalytical Psychotherapy and Visiting Professor of Psychoanalysis at Northumbria University.