The British psychoanalyst Marion Milner’s (1900-1998) use of imaginative scenarios (both the patient’s and hers) is ana- lyzed in an analytic situation – considered a metaphor of the parent-child relationship – in which the patient introjects the type of care of the therapist. The illusion of oneness, of the “me not-me” fusion, has a structuring function which may not take place during early childhood. The analysis allows patients to regress to their earliest experiences in order to work them through and either take up or go through a developmental process. Some aspects of theory and technique are considered
Experience shows that in the long run there is only one weapon available against mental sickness: e...
The research question was stirred by observations that the set-up of the clinical situation seems to...
Freud did not do multifamily psychoanalysis. He contributed his concept of tenderness: designating a...
The British psychoanalyst Marion Milner's (1900-1998) use of imaginative scenarios (both the patient...
Marion Milner places the passage from the original primary object to the secondary object (a passage...
It is unusual to combine mysticism and psychoanalysis. Marion Milner, however, achieved precisely th...
This paper outlines the thinking of the English psychoanalyst and painter Marion Milner (1900-1998) ...
This article explores British psychoanalyst Marion Milner's (1900–1998) understanding of how creativ...
This dissertation analyses literature written by the psychoanalyst and artist Marion Milner, in rela...
This book traces the development of British psychoanalyst Marion Milner’s (1900–98) autobiographical...
Marion Milner was a British psychoanalyst whose life spanned the major part of the twentieth century...
Born in 1900, Marion Milner started psychoanalytic training in 1940, following a trajectory which to...
The separation-individuation process is Margaret Mahler’s key contribution to the field of developme...
This book chapter focuses on Marion Milner’s development of D. W. Winnicot’s theoretical perspective...
ESCUDEIRO, Rebeca de Souza; FONTENELE, Laéria Bezerra. O louco, a criança e o analista: contribuiçõe...
Experience shows that in the long run there is only one weapon available against mental sickness: e...
The research question was stirred by observations that the set-up of the clinical situation seems to...
Freud did not do multifamily psychoanalysis. He contributed his concept of tenderness: designating a...
The British psychoanalyst Marion Milner's (1900-1998) use of imaginative scenarios (both the patient...
Marion Milner places the passage from the original primary object to the secondary object (a passage...
It is unusual to combine mysticism and psychoanalysis. Marion Milner, however, achieved precisely th...
This paper outlines the thinking of the English psychoanalyst and painter Marion Milner (1900-1998) ...
This article explores British psychoanalyst Marion Milner's (1900–1998) understanding of how creativ...
This dissertation analyses literature written by the psychoanalyst and artist Marion Milner, in rela...
This book traces the development of British psychoanalyst Marion Milner’s (1900–98) autobiographical...
Marion Milner was a British psychoanalyst whose life spanned the major part of the twentieth century...
Born in 1900, Marion Milner started psychoanalytic training in 1940, following a trajectory which to...
The separation-individuation process is Margaret Mahler’s key contribution to the field of developme...
This book chapter focuses on Marion Milner’s development of D. W. Winnicot’s theoretical perspective...
ESCUDEIRO, Rebeca de Souza; FONTENELE, Laéria Bezerra. O louco, a criança e o analista: contribuiçõe...
Experience shows that in the long run there is only one weapon available against mental sickness: e...
The research question was stirred by observations that the set-up of the clinical situation seems to...
Freud did not do multifamily psychoanalysis. He contributed his concept of tenderness: designating a...