A text exploring the frontiers of contemporary psychoanalytic thinking: the experience of the analyst and patient in the dynamic interplay of subjectivity and intersubjectivity. The author shows how the development of sensitivity to the use of language is a necessary part of an analyst's development.
psychoanalytic terms, the word reverie enjoyed centuries of use. The first references appear in Old French, rêver, to be delirious, or drunken, perhaps in relation to the word rêve, or dream. Later in Old French, rêverie came to connote ...
'This is an extraordinary and exciting book, the work of a truly original and creative psychoanalytic theoretician and most astute clinician.
In this volume, he builds on the work of Freud, Klein, Winnicott, and Bion and explores the idea that human psychopathology is a manifestation of a breakdown of the individual's capacity to dream his experience.
What one chooses to say in analysis, why one chooses it, how one says it, when one says it; these are the building blocks of the interpretive process and the focus of Interpretation in Jungian Analysis: Art and Technique.
After searching for the roots of the analyst’s use of reverie in Bion’s work and questioning whether in this regard Bion was a Bionian, Busch carefully examines the work of some post-Bionians and finds both convincing ways to think ...
Anakin Skywalker searches for the evil Darth Sidious, struggles with his duty as a Jedi Knight and role as the secret husband of Senator Padme Amidala, and strives to eliminate all resistance to the Empire in his new role as Darth Vader.
Clinicians who read this volume will be richly awarded by an expanded understanding of their patients and the therapeutic process.
In A Nervous State, Nancy Rose Hunt considers the afterlives of violence and harm in King Leopold’s Congo Free State.
This book will be of interest to the psychoanalytic community including psychotherapy professionals, psychoanalysts, post graduate, graduate and undergraduate students.
Moreover, he was inviting me to join him in talking about the work of two brothers, the Coen brothers, who made extraordinary things together. Making something (becoming someone) with one's brother was an experience that the patient had ...