Abstract The author focuses on the person of the analyst and particularly how it helps shape two key factors in psychoanalysis: clinical narration and the analyst's interpretations. Freud's comments on how treatment is influenced by the analyst's individuality are briefly reviewed; and Winnicott's notion of how the individual analyst relates to the patient--including how he does and does not interpret--is also discussed. Following a detailed description of an analytic treatment, the author discusses various aspects of the analyst's attitude and functioning, including countertransference, and how these are affected by the person of the analyst
Determining the indications and contraindications for psychoanalytic treatment seems crucial to achi...
The ways in which the analyst’s desire for particular experiences with patients is inevitable and of...
Focusing on the analyst's internal world, the author reflects on the most complex of the inherent di...
This paper is a study of countertransference, broadly defined to include all of the affective respon...
One of the tasks that analysts and therapists face at a certain stage in their career is how to deve...
Recognition of the analyst’s subjective involvement has led to pro-found reconsideration of the natu...
The patient “employs” and “enlists” the analyst in his various transference forms, not so much by at...
For certain patients who approach analysts for treatment, analysis remains the only treatment that c...
On the basis of Lacan’s characterization of the Discourse of the Analyst, this seminar contrasted Ps...
The theory and practice of American psychoanalysis have changed in the last twenty years, in a gener...
William Grossman’s contributions to psychoanalysis are studied in the light of an interest that suff...
The patient’s efforts to enter into a collaborative relationship with the analyst, to become an anal...
The author begins by characterizing the present situation of psychoanalysis as one of increasing the...
To clarify the concepts of critical realism, subjectivity, and subjectivism, distinctions are drawn ...
This paper describes the difficulty of working with patients who have adopted conflict solutions com...
Determining the indications and contraindications for psychoanalytic treatment seems crucial to achi...
The ways in which the analyst’s desire for particular experiences with patients is inevitable and of...
Focusing on the analyst's internal world, the author reflects on the most complex of the inherent di...
This paper is a study of countertransference, broadly defined to include all of the affective respon...
One of the tasks that analysts and therapists face at a certain stage in their career is how to deve...
Recognition of the analyst’s subjective involvement has led to pro-found reconsideration of the natu...
The patient “employs” and “enlists” the analyst in his various transference forms, not so much by at...
For certain patients who approach analysts for treatment, analysis remains the only treatment that c...
On the basis of Lacan’s characterization of the Discourse of the Analyst, this seminar contrasted Ps...
The theory and practice of American psychoanalysis have changed in the last twenty years, in a gener...
William Grossman’s contributions to psychoanalysis are studied in the light of an interest that suff...
The patient’s efforts to enter into a collaborative relationship with the analyst, to become an anal...
The author begins by characterizing the present situation of psychoanalysis as one of increasing the...
To clarify the concepts of critical realism, subjectivity, and subjectivism, distinctions are drawn ...
This paper describes the difficulty of working with patients who have adopted conflict solutions com...
Determining the indications and contraindications for psychoanalytic treatment seems crucial to achi...
The ways in which the analyst’s desire for particular experiences with patients is inevitable and of...
Focusing on the analyst's internal world, the author reflects on the most complex of the inherent di...