Contemporary Psychoanalysis (contemporary + psychoanalysis)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


PLURALISM IN CONTEMPORARY PSYCHOANALYSIS: THEORY AND PRACTICE

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTHERAPY, Issue 2 2008
Jean White
abstract As this paper was originally delivered as the British Journal of Psychotherapy Annual Lecture, I have retained the spoken tone of the original. In contemporary physics, cosmology and philosophy, there is now a recognition that no single paradigm or theory can represent reality and growing credence in the idea that learning is advanced more rapidly through a pluralistic model. This paper argues that the same applies to psychoanalysis and the psychoanalytic psychotherapies. It explores the value given to the recognition of difference in contemporary Independent, Lacanian and post-Kleinian thought and the psychopathology attributed to single vision, and argues for the urgent need to engage in constructive cross-paradigmatic discussion. [source]


Emotion as an Infinite Experience: Matte Blanco and Contemporary Psychoanalysis

THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOANALYSIS, Issue 1 2009
Sarantis Thanopulos
First page of article [source]


Generation: Preoccupations and Conflicts in Contemporary Psychoanalysis , By Jean White

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTHERAPY, Issue 3 2009
Robert Snell
First page of article [source]


Freud's Oedipus and Kristeva's Narcissus: Three Heterogeneities

HYPATIA, Issue 1 2005
SARA BEARDSWORTH
The paper shows that three heterogeneities in Freud and Kristeva (unconscious/conscious, semiotic/symbolic, and imaginary/symbolic) expose the historical emergence, significance, and demise of psychic structures that present obstacles to our progressive political thinking. The oedipal and narcissistic structures of subjectivity represent the persistence of two past, bad forms of authority: paternal law and maternal authority. Contemporary psychoanalysis reveals a humankind going through the loss of this past in a process that opens up a different future of sexual difference in Western cultures. [source]


Contemporary psychoanalysis in relation to analytical psychology: introduction and questionnaire

THE JOURNAL OF ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 1 2002
Joe Cambray
First page of article [source]


The capacity to be an analyst: A contribution from attachment research to the study of candidate selection

THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOANALYSIS, Issue 6 2003
Janice Halpern
In this paper the author discusses how the study of candidate selection, once a topic of vibrant research, has unfortunately languished. Certain qualities were thought to characterize the successful candidate. However, they were never successfully operationalized nor empirically tested. Possibly because of this lack of empirical data, selectors today have difficulty articulating their criteria and are relying on intuition. In order to provide a more rational basis for contemporary selection, the author looks to the attachment literature. This makes sense because attachment theory shares some basic assumptions of contemporary psychoanalysis. The Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) is a research tool that predicts the ability of a parent to convey attachment security. It is scored by attending to how a person speaks about his early attachment experiences. The AAI appears to tap into similar qualities to those selection researchers have sought in their candidates. Further, the scoring method of the AAI appears to be similar to the last attempt by selection researchers to operationalize them. Given these similarities, the author recommends an empirical study using the AAI to operationalize these qualities in analytic candidates. The study would test their importance for success in the training program, thus offering selectors some empirical grounding for their choices. [source]


ATTACHMENT THEORY AND PSYCHOANALYSIS: A RAPPROCHEMENT

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTHERAPY, Issue 2 2000
Jeremy Holmes
ABSTRACT Attachment Theory, itself an offspring of psychoanalysis, can play a significant part in helping to link contemporary psychoanalysis with developments in neurobiology, neoDarwinism and infant research. Some highlights of this research are presented. Interpersonal experience in infancy impacts on the developing brain. Patterns of insecure attachment can be related to classical psychoanalytic defence mechanisms, but are seen as ways of maintaining contact with an object in suboptimal environments. The Adult Attachment Interview establishes different patterns of narrative style which can be related to parent-child interaction in infancy, and has confirmed many of psychoanalysis's major developmental hypotheses. With the help of two clinical examples, it is suggested that attachment ideas can help with clinical listening and identifying and intervening with different narrative styles in therapy. [source]