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E-grāmata: Taboo or Not Taboo?: Forbidden Thoughts, Forbidden Acts in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy

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'Psychoanalysis has, from its inception, been a discipline concerned with overcoming the ill effects of certain social taboos. Given this focus, it might be assumed that psychoanalysis and its practitioners are free of the constraints imposed by restrictive taboos. This book challenges this idea by examining a sampling of the taboos that are rife in the field. It is not intended to offer a complete summary of all of the forbidden ideas, clinical procedures, behaviors and institutional practices in psychoanalysis, but rather to raise consciousness about the fact that even within a field which encourages freedom of expression, many issues remain difficult to fully discuss both in the consulting room and in professional discourse. The book provides a refreshing, thoughtful, honest look at many of the taboos present in psychoanalysis, even at this moment of greatly improved communication between the various theoretical schools in the field. Reading it provides a sense of freedom for the reader, as speaking of forbidden thoughts always does. We hope the book will inspire others to seriously consider the taboos that hamper their practices, and that further ideas on these issues will come to light.'- Lori Bohm, from the IntroductionTaboo or Not Taboo? Forbidden Thoughts, Forbidden Acts in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy has been awarded the Goethe Award for Psychoanalytic & Psychodynamic Scholarship for 2009.

Recenzijas

'Few books on psychoanalysis deserve to be described as "pageturners". However, this collection of papers concerns all those topics in psychoanalysis that "cannot be spoken of". Inherently, therefore, it is one of the most intriguing books ever written by psychoanalysts for psychoanalysts. Each author reveals something that is known, yet not known, about the work that psychoanalysts do. In the current age of demand for greater transparency from professionals, this is a timely and important collection.'- Peter Fonagy, from the Foreword'This book is a living paradox. A taboo is something we should avoid talking about, yet here any sort of taboo is openly described and discussed in detail. Sex, money, spirituality, ageing and the analyst's need to retire, what analysts say to one another behind closed doors about their practice, the analyst's self-disclosures and enactments, to touch or not to touch a patient - these are some of the issues this book deals with, and the authors of the various chapters are among the most distinguished scholars in the field. Really a book worth reading.'- Paolo Migone, M.D., editor, Psicoterapia e Scienze Umane 'The editors have selected authors who courageously tackle taboo topics by boldly articulating issues that cry out for candid self-examination. The result is a stimulating, nuanced consideration of inhibitions in exploring such matters as money (eg: holding onto patients for economic reasons, accepting cash payments), sexual arousal in the transference-countertransference, expressions of tenderness, the use of non-sexual touch, spirituality, telepathy, varieties of self-disclosure, deviations from the traditional analytic frame, age-related cognitive decline in the analyst, theoretical 'heresy', and other topics that typically are avoided in psychoanalytic training institutes. Clinicians of all schools and levels of experience will derive considerable benefit from this excellent book.'- David L. Wolitzky, Ph.D,Supervisor, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis

Acknowledgements ix
About the Editors and Contributors xi
Foreword xv
Peter Fonagy
Introduction xix
Lori C. Bohm
PART I: ON TABOO
Taboo: its origins and its current echoes
3(14)
James S. Grotstein
Some taboo implications of current fashions in psychoanalysis
17(20)
Morris Eagle
PART II: EXPRESSIONS OF EROS
37(38)
Sexual excitement in the transference-countertransference situation
39(10)
Charles Spezzano
Sexual taboo in the analyst: yes or no?
49(16)
Ronald Ruskin
Grappling with tenderness in psychoanalysis
65(10)
Janet McCulloch
PART III: TRANSCENDING TRADITIONAL THOUGHT: BUDDHISM AND SPIRITUALITY
75(46)
Self or no self: psychoanalytic and Buddhist perspectives on neuroendocrine events and subjective experience
77(18)
Robert Besner
There is more than meets the I: psychoanalytic reflections on spirituality
95(26)
Jeffrey B. Rubin
PART IV: FINANCIAL AFFAIRS
121(56)
Down low and dirty: talking about how money matters, especially on a sliding scale
123(10)
Janet Tintner
For a fistful of dollars: psychoanalytic issues in handling cash payments
133(14)
Mark V. Mellinger
When the patient has more real world power than the analyst
147(10)
Jill Howard
The analyst and the bribe
157(20)
Adam Phillips
PART V: CONFIDENTIALITY: TOO MUCH OR TOO LITTLE?
177(14)
Confidentiality in the public realm: what and whose is it?
179(12)
Harriette Kaley
PART VI: FACING REAL WORLD ISSUES
191(58)
Can psychoanalysis exist outside the consulting room?
193(16)
Mark B. Borg, Jr.
Emily Garrod
Michael Dalla, Jr.
Jennifer McCarroll
When analysts need to retire: the taboo of ageing in psychoanalysis
209(20)
Peter Fonagy
Behind closed doors: what analysts say to one another about the practice of psychoanalysis
229(20)
Richard R. Hansen
PART VII: SELF-DISCLOSURE: TO DO OR NOT TO DO?
249(56)
Non-countertransferential self-disclosure in psychoanalysis
251(16)
Daniel Gensler
Analytic safety through the analyst's availability as a subject
267(24)
Anton Hart
To know without being told and to allow oneself to say
291(14)
Martha Hadley
PART VIII: PROSCRIBED INTERVENTIONS
305(46)
A forbidden transaction: enactment or procedural interpretation?
307(20)
Bruce Herzog
To touch or not to touch in the psychoanalytic arena
327(24)
James L. Fosshage
PART IX: REFLECTIONS
351(16)
What is taboo and not taboo in psychoanalysis?
353(8)
Rebecca C. Curtis
Epilogue: Glancing back, facing forward. ``Final'' thoughts on taboo
361(6)
Brent Willock
Index 367
Lori C. Bohm, Ph.D. Supervising Analyst and Faculty, William Alanson White Institute; Supervisor of Psychotherapy, Clinical Psychology Doctoral Program, City College of New York and St. Luke's/Roosevelt Hospital Center; private practice in New York City and Hastings-on-Hudson. Rebecca Curtis, Ph.D. Director of Research and Supervisor, William Alanson White Institute; Professor of Psychology, Derner Institute, Adelphi University; Editor of 'Self-Defeating Behaviors, The Relational Self' and 'How People Change'. Brent Willock, Ph.D. President: Toronto Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis; Ontario Society for Contemporary Psychoanalysis. Faculty: Toronto Child Psychoanalytic Program; Institute for the Advancement of Self Psychology. Advisory Board, International Association for Relational Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy.