Psychoanalytic Principles in Psychiatric Practice: A Remedy by Truth
Book Details
- Publisher : Routledge
- Published : 2024
- Cover : Paperback
- Pages : 216
- Category :
Psychoanalysis - Catalogue No : 97800
- ISBN 13 : 9781032686202
- ISBN 10 : 1032686200
Reviews and Endorsements
This is one of the best attempts to bring Freudian psychoanalysis to the 21st century. Kinet takes you on a personal journey through the psychoanalytic landscape, reviewing and integrating Freudian and Lacanian approaches with object relations theory, neuropsychoanalysis and attachment approaches. There is always something new to discover for the reader. Recommended for both adventurers and the more cautious within the psychoanalytic tradition.
Patrick Luyten, professor KU Leuven and University College London
Mark Kinet can plausibly defend the unique perspective of psychoanalysis because, unlike many of his colleagues, he embraces its theoretical and clinical diversity, and he remains abreast of developments in neighbouring fields: psychiatry, psychotherapy and neuroscience.
Mark Solms is a neuropsychologist and psychoanalyst, professor University of Cape Town
Psychoanalysis does not exist' - it could have been a statement by Lacan. Then again, psychoanalysis does exist in many variants. It takes an experienced guide like Kinet to see the common core and the differences between the various interpretations. He consigns the idea of monolithic psychoanalysis to the dustbin, along with ill-founded criticisms. A picture of psychoanalytic currents suffices to conclude that there is still a great deal left for psychoanalytic therapy within psychiatric practice today.
Paul Verhaeghe is a clinical psychologist, psychoanalyst and emeritus professor Ghent University
This is a timely and urgent book. It gives a clear insight from different perspectives and aptly outlines their interrelationship. The book demonstrates great knowledge and is enthusiastically written. It shows psychoanalysis as a rich world of thought, a unity in diversity, without nitpicking. It frees it from its excessive self-involvement and self-chosen limitation to 'pure psychoanalysis'. And it can help psychiatry - which has itself lost its way in a self-created maze of mental disorders and treatment modules - regain substance and get in touch with life lived.
Antoine Mooij is a psychiatrist, philosopher, psychoanalyst and emeritus professor at Utrecht University
A Remedy by Truth is a very fine book. Mark Kinet, in his gracious and inimitable style, navigates the divergences and convergences of psychiatry and psychoanalysis. He weaves a rich tapestry of psychoanalysis' history, showing where it intersects with (and departs from) medicine, philosophy, and literature. Through its breadth and scope, it is a great introduction to psychoanalysis.
Arthur Eaton, PhD is a psychologist, philosopher, historian, journalist and author
This book offers an original view of the major issues in psychoanalytically oriented psychiatry and psychotherapy. It is based on 40 years of clinical practice and an integration of diverse psychoanalytic theories as author/editor of over 30 books. Add Kinet's free-thinking style, wit, and insightful metaphors, and you get this refreshing look at the psychodynamic approach's dilemmas.
Rudi Vermote is a psychiatrist, psychoanalyst and emeritus professor KU Leuven