"How often have you had the opportunity to follow a scholar and thinkers transformation from academic psychologist and laboratory researcher to psychoanalyst? Never, I wager. But that fascinating thread of development is just the beginning of what you will find here. Neil Skolnick uses the theme of temporality to examine the development of his own substantial contributions to the field, offering introductions that contextualize each chapter in psychoanalytic history. In the process he gives us a compelling account of the development of relational psychoanalysis. If you want to grasp the relational turn, follow the thread of Skolnicks work. He has been there for all of it." - Donnel Stern, Ph.D., William Alanson White Institute and NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis
"In this scholarly, lucid and compelling volume, Neil Skolnick takes on a range of topics that he creatively links to the overarching theme of time. This fascinating theme has rarely been explored from a relational psychoanalytic perspective. Yet time silently shapes much of our experience within and outside the analytic encounter.
Skolnick enacts something of times complex effect by tracing the evolution of his own professional thinking across the broad sweep of his career, from his beginnings as a doctoral research candidate. He leaves us in the present, where he muses about the limits of relational theory.
En route, Skolnick moves across a range of conceptual dimensions and clinical issues. He challenges and re-sculpts existing psychoanalytic wisdom about several issues. One chapter, for example, offers a new take on Fairbairn by proposing the existence of an unconscious good object, something of an oxymoron in traditional Fairbairnian thinking. In a chapter on the use of the couch, Skolnick again challenges our traditional understanding by arguing against a perspective linking the couch tightly with 'true' analysis
Skolnicks broad and measured book is thick with personal, clinical and theoretical reflections that push the reader to think outside the box. It invites the reader in and invites us to theorize hard and question hard. A pleasure to have a new book from such a creative clinician and thinker." - Joyce Slochower, Ph.D., NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy
"Neil Skolnicks Relational Psychoanalysis and Temporality is really several fascinating books in one. Written in an accessible, scholarly yet unburdened way, Skolnick takes an essential axis in psychoanalytic theory, temporality, and weaves it through the fabric of clinical work and the evolution of contemporary psychoanalytic theory. Skolnick offers a rich understanding of the relationship between patient and analysts internal objects and the unique intersubjective field. Finally, readers will also discover a sophisticated historical view of the history of ideas and concepts developed within the relational tradition. It is an imaginative journey filled with appreciation and criticism of relational theory, inspiring questions about our next turns in psychoanalytic theory." - Steven H. Cooper, Ph.D., Associate Professor in Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School