The Concept of Analytic Contact: The Kleinian Approach to Reaching the Hard to Reach Patient
Book Details
- Publisher : Routledge
- Published : 2007
- Category :
Psychoanalysis - Catalogue No : 25392
- ISBN 13 : 9780415422925
- ISBN 10 : 0415422922
Reviews and Endorsements
Divided into four parts, this book covers:
* the concept of analytic contact
* caution and reluctance concerning psychological engagement
* drugs, Mutilation, and Psychic Fragmentation
* clinical reality, psychoanalysis and the utility of analytic contact.
Analytic contact is demonstrated to be a valuable clinical approach to working analytically with a complicated group of patients in a successful manner. It will be of great interest to all practitioners in the field of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy.
'Robert Waska is a new and promising American voice in the literature on Kleinian theory and practice and also on the psychoanalytic treatment of the difficult patient. Utmostly he encourages us to "think analytically" while treating any patient no matter how infrequently we see them or how ill they may be. This work also presents us with a studious review and amplification of Kleinian theory and technique.' - James Grotstein
Table of Contents
The Concept of Analytic Contact:
Defining Psychoanalytic Treatment. Clinical Reality and the Concept of Analytic Contact.
The Kleinian Interpretation: Bringing Theory into a Clinical Stance. Projective Identification, Everyday Life, and the Analytic Situation.
Caution and Reluctance Concerning Psychological Engagement:
Reality, Phantasy, and the Fragile of Analytic Contact.
The Analyst as Translator: Speaking the Unspoken.
The Patient's Desire to be Parented Void of Growth or Change.
Drugs, Mutilation, and Psychic Fragmentation: Is Analytic Contact Still Possible?
Addictions.
Psychic Mutilation and the Struggle for Integration.
Fragmented Attachments.
Clinical Reality, Psychoanalysis, and the Utility of Analytic Contact:
Loss.
Looking at Films for Perspective on Structural Change.
Psychoanalysis or Psychotherapy: Shifting the Debate to a Clinical Focus.
Summary.
Bibliography