For Enid Balint, the practice of analysis can be compared with the process of learning a language. "The analyst who can do this, " she says, "will continue to learn with every patient who comes to him throughout his professional life." Enid Balint has been a training analyst of the British Psycho-Analytical Society since the 1960s. She founded the Institute of Marital Studies at the Tavistock Clinic in London, and with her husband, Michael Balint, developed the training method for doctors known...
Psychic Experience and Problems of Technique (The New Library of Psychoanalysis, #13)
by Harold Stewart
In "Psychic Experience and Problems of Technique" Stewart draws on his own clinical experience to focus on changes in the patient's experience of inner space, and to record the growth of his own understanding of the patient's experience and how this can change. Beginning with an account of the role of collusion in the myth of Jocasta and Oedipus, he goes on to a theoretical discussion of thinking, dreams, inner space and the hypnotic state, in the context of extensive clinical experience. The se...
The Psychoanalysis of Symptoms (Psychopharmacology Series; 9)
by Henry Kellerman
Psicoanalisis, UN Discurso En Movimiento: Derivas Del Decubrimiento Freudiano
by Hector Lopez and Hugo Levin
Psychoanalysis and Pedagogy
Endorsement from Philip Wexler, Michael Scandling Professor - Warner School, University of Rochester: ""Appel's volume joins the move toward understanding education through embodiment, experience, and intimate relationality, filling in the gaps left by earlier so-called critical and post-structuralist efforts in the field. This work simultaneously rehumanizes teaching and education as a practice and contributes to the creation of new foundations for educational theory.
Dire Emotions and Lethal Behaviors: Eclipse of the Life Instinct
by Charles Stewart
The Uses of Psychoanalysis in Working with Children's Emotional Lives (New Imago)
This volume offers very specific illustrations of psychoanalytic ways of thinking and working in both clinical and pedagogical contexts with children. It is designed for professionals who work with infants, children, and adolescents, and who are seeking modes of working that respects emotions, that embrace context, and that privilege imagination and possibility. For professionals who already practice in ways that are sympathetic to these modes of working, the scholarly underpinning of this work...
Projective Identification in the Clinical Setting: The Kleinian Interpretation
by Robert Waska
A Psychodynamic Approach to Education (Insight Professional S.)
by Alex Coren
Does the education system damage young people's emotional develpment? What is the symbolic meaning of examinations and tests? This study takes a look at the concepts and values of education and questions traditional attitudes. It examines the psychological effects of education on young people and adults and explores the role of education in "splitting" the intellect and emotions, psyche and some. It sees tests and examinations as a rite of passage.
Abwehroffizier
by Lambert M Surhone, Miriam T Timpledon, and Susan F Marseken
The Many Voices of Psychoanalysis (New Library of Psychoanalysis)
by Roger Kennedy
The Many Voices of Psychoanalysis spans over thirty years of Roger Kennedy's work as a practicing psychoanalyst, providing a fascinating insight into the process of development of psychoanalytic identity. The introduction puts the papers into context, charting the development of the author's practice and understanding of psychoanalysis and his position as part of the British Independent tradition. The intention of the chapters is to address the 'many voices' of psychoanalysis - the many roles an...
First Published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
An important, accessible addition to the psychology shelf, this international bestseller explains how adulthood is affected by our earliest memories - and how we can reclaim and interpret them."Tell me what you remember and I'll tell you who you are." With this challenge, psychologist and psychotherapist Patrick Estrade introduces his groundbreaking method to analyze and interpret childhood memories. Such memories are widely recognized as the keys that unlock our internal world, direct our actio...
Within the context of a careful review of the psychology of religion and prior non-Lacanian literature on the subject, Raul Moncayo builds a bridge between Lacanian psychoanalysis and Zen Buddhism that steers clear of reducing one to the other or creating a simplistic synthesis between the two. Instead, by making a purposeful "One-mistake" of "unknown knowing", this book remains consistent with the analytic unconscious and continues in the splendid tradition of Bodhidharma who did not know "Who"...
As long as feelings are second-class citizens, people will be second class citizens. Experience is an endangered species. An important function of psychotherapy is to make time for experiencing. Psychic taste buds really exist and rarely rest. They feed us each other, gauge states of being, states of spirit. We taste each other's feelings and intentions. An important aim of this book is to build psychic taste buds, not put them down or pretend they don't exist. A positive feeling runs through th...
Wit and Its Relation to the Unconscious (Barnes & Noble Digital Library)
by Sigmund Freud
Unhappy Divorce of Sociology and Psychoanalysis, The: Diverse Perspectives on the Psychosocial
The Development of Psychoanalysis
by Sandor Ferenczi and Professor Otto Rank
Gradiva / Delusion And Dream In Wilhelm Jensen's Gradiva
by Sigmund Freud and Wilhelm Jensen
The plays of Shakespeare are filled with ghosts – and ghost writing. Shakespeare's Ghost Writers is an examination of the authorship controversy surrounding Shakespeare: the claim made repeatedly that the plays were ghost written. Ghosts take the form of absences, erasures, even forgeries and signatures – metaphors extended to include Shakespeare himself and his haunting of us, and in particular theorists such Derrida, Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud – the figure of Shakespeare constantly made and...