“The Use of an Object and Relating through Identifications” (1968) represents Donald Winnicott’s theoretical and clinical legacy. The author develops this concept from a clinical point of view, through the analysis of a woman with psychotic functioning. He reflects upon the dramatic quality of risks inherent in the processes linked to the use of the object with seriously disturbed patients. He explores different meanings of the analyst’s survival, linking it to the analyst’s response. The processes of the use of the object—that is, the encounter between the patient’s potential destructiveness and the analyst’s capacity to respond through his own judicious subjectivity—let the patient experience the analyst’s capacity to keep his own subje...
The patient’s efforts to enter into a collaborative relationship with the analyst, to become an anal...
Transference implies the actualization of the analyst in the analytic encounter. Lacan developed thi...
International audienceMy communication leans on the chapter 5 of « Of paediatrics in the psychoanaly...
One of the tasks that analysts and therapists face at a certain stage in their career is how to deve...
This thesis explores the role and representation of material objects in experiences of illness, rec...
The author discusses the vicissitudes of working analytically with patients who present with monolit...
Abstract The author focuses on the person of the analyst and particularly how it helps shape two key...
ABSTRACT: The article focuses on the consequences of Winnicott's style for his work and for the psyc...
People experience and treat medication as though it were a person: in other words, as an object. Amo...
The patient “employs” and “enlists” the analyst in his various transference forms, not so much by at...
Psychosis questions the foundations of psychoanalytic theory and challenges our ultimate convictions...
The author begins with an examination of two unpublished notes by Melanie Klein, written in 1953 and...
In this paper I examine the nature of the relationship between art and reality, arguing for the cent...
Recognition of the analyst’s subjective involvement has led to pro-found reconsideration of the natu...
To clarify the concepts of critical realism, subjectivity, and subjectivism, distinctions are drawn ...
The patient’s efforts to enter into a collaborative relationship with the analyst, to become an anal...
Transference implies the actualization of the analyst in the analytic encounter. Lacan developed thi...
International audienceMy communication leans on the chapter 5 of « Of paediatrics in the psychoanaly...
One of the tasks that analysts and therapists face at a certain stage in their career is how to deve...
This thesis explores the role and representation of material objects in experiences of illness, rec...
The author discusses the vicissitudes of working analytically with patients who present with monolit...
Abstract The author focuses on the person of the analyst and particularly how it helps shape two key...
ABSTRACT: The article focuses on the consequences of Winnicott's style for his work and for the psyc...
People experience and treat medication as though it were a person: in other words, as an object. Amo...
The patient “employs” and “enlists” the analyst in his various transference forms, not so much by at...
Psychosis questions the foundations of psychoanalytic theory and challenges our ultimate convictions...
The author begins with an examination of two unpublished notes by Melanie Klein, written in 1953 and...
In this paper I examine the nature of the relationship between art and reality, arguing for the cent...
Recognition of the analyst’s subjective involvement has led to pro-found reconsideration of the natu...
To clarify the concepts of critical realism, subjectivity, and subjectivism, distinctions are drawn ...
The patient’s efforts to enter into a collaborative relationship with the analyst, to become an anal...
Transference implies the actualization of the analyst in the analytic encounter. Lacan developed thi...
International audienceMy communication leans on the chapter 5 of « Of paediatrics in the psychoanaly...