This book includes articles that describe how Winnicott's thinking facilitates the building of bridges between the internal and external realities, and, outside the boundaries of psychoanalysis as well as within it, between different schools of thought.
Series Editors Foreword -- Introduction -- Winnicott: His Work and
Legacy -- Section Introduction -- Has Winnicott become a Winnicottian? --
Winnicotts constant search for the life that feels real -- People who think
in pictures: the continuing dialogue between Marion Milner and Donald
Winnicott in Bothered by Alligators -- Unassimilated aggression and the
emergence of the unit self: Winnicott, Jung, and Matte Blanco -- Winnicott
and Bion: claiming alternate legacies -- Winnicotts anni horribiles: the
biographical roots of Hate in the counter-transference -- Between Winnicott
and Lacan -- A measure of agreement: an exploration of the relationship of
Winnicott and Phyllis Greenacre -- Clinical Work and Applications of
Winnicotts Tradition -- Section Introduction -- On potential space --
Creating connections -- The paternal function in Winnicott: the
psychoanalytical frame, becoming human -- Where we start from: thinking
with Winnicott and Lacan about the care of homeless adults -- Seeing and
being seen: the psychodynamics of pornography through the lens of Winnicotts
thought -- The isolate and the stranger: Winnicotts model of subjectivity
and its implications for theory and technique -- Hatred and helping: working
with our own fear and narcissistic rage -- I feel that you are introducing a
big problem. I never became human. I have missed it -- The analysts
oscillating between interpreting and not interpreting: a peculiar
Winnicottian point of view on interpreting and not interpreting -- Maternal
perinatal mental illness: the babys unexperienced breakdown -- Mind the gap:
dysynchrony in the writings of Winnicott and associated clinical thoughts --
Specialised Work in the Winnicott Tradition -- Section Introduction -- The
importance of being seen: Winnicott, dance movement psychotherapy, and the
embodied experience -- The location of authenticity --
Transitional/transitivepictures from an exhibition -- The seriousness of
playfulness -- Maternal form in artistic creation -- Ways of being:
transitional objects and the work of art -- Unintegrated states and the
process of integration: a new formulation -- The reflected self -- Oedipus,
schmedipus: so long as he loves his mother: teaching Winnicott to a
non-analytic audience -- Personal and Theoretical Reflections from Clinicians
-- Section Introduction -- Two pioneers in the history of infant mental
health: Winnicott and Bowlby -- Winnicotts influence on paediatrics then and
now -- Anna Freud and Winnicott: developmental stages, aggression, and
infantile sexuality -- A personal reflection: claiming alternate legacies
Margaret Boyle Spelman, Frances Thomson-Salo