The Limits of Interpretation opens a window onto unexplored dimensions of Wilfred Bions thought, presenting essays that illuminate both familiar and lesser-known facets of his work.
The Limits of Interpretation opens a window onto unexplored dimensions of Wilfred Bions thought, presenting essays that illuminate both familiar and lesser-known facets of his work. It guides readers through complex notions such as visible-invisible hallucinations, bizarre objects, and a radical reframing of the Oedipus complexshifted from incest and parricide to arrogance and the desire for knowledge.
Taking various of Bion's key works in turn, Civitarese explores what is unique about Bion's thinking on essential topics such as projective identification, infantile development and intuition, to shed light on the continued importance of Bion's early work in particular for contemporary psychoanalysis. By focusing on Bions Kleinian-phase essays, this volume highlights their pivotal role in comprehending his entire theoretical landscape and how far they extend beyond traditional Freudian and Kleinian frameworks. It even poses the question: was Bion ever truly a Kleinian?
Offering a close reading and clear interpretation of Bion's sometimes dense writing, this is essential reading for any psychoanalysts or psychotherapist wanting to understand Bion's work better.
1. Experiences in Groups as a Key to Late Bion
2. The Limits of
Interpretation. A Reading of Bions On Arrogance
3. Invisible-Visual
Hallucinations in Bions Attacks on Linking
4. The Concept of Time in
Bion's A Theory of Thinking
5. Intuition and We-ness in Bion and
Post-Bionian Field Theory
6. Bions O and His Pseudo-Mystical Path
Giuseppe Civitarese, MD, PhD, is a training and supervising analyst (SPI, APsaA, IPA). He lives in Pavia, Italy. His books include The Intimate Room: Theory and Technique of the Analytic Field; The Violence of Emotions: Bion and PostBion Psychoanalysis; Truth and the Unconscious; Sublime Subjects: Aesthetic Experience and Intersubjectivity in Psychoanalysis; and Psychoanalytic Field Theory: A Contemporary Introduction.