Couple and Family Psychoanalysis: Volume 15 Number 1 – Special Issue: Couples and Families in Film

Book Details
- Publisher : Karnac Books
- Published : January 2000
- Pages : 140
- Category :
Family, Couple and Systemic Therapy - Category 2 :
Journals & Periodicals - Catalogue No : 98116
Also by Perrine Moran
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Couple and Family Psychoanalysis is an international journal sponsored by The Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology, which aims to promote the theory and practice of working with couple and family relationships from a psychoanalytic perspective.
ARTICLES AND FILM REVIEWS
– Adoption, identity, and coupling: Viewing Return to Seoul through a clinical lens by Christopher Clulow (Return to Seoul, Chou, France, 2022)
– A process of family subjectivation in Kore-eda’s Broker (South Korea, 2022) Review by Cristelle Lebon
– Vincent and Theo van Gogh: Their fraternal link in two biographical films by Massimiliano Sommantico (Vincent and Theo, Altman, USA, 1990, and At Eternity’s Gate, Schnabel, co-production, 2018)
– Disruptive losses in three European films about families by Andrea Sabbadini (Theorem, Pasolini, Italy 1968, The Son’s Room, Moretti, Italy 2001, and Festen, Vinterberg, Denmark, 1998)
– The Zone of Interest (Glazer, UK/USA/Poland, 2023) by Krisztina Glausius
– Fighting in the Garden of Eden by Joanna Rosenthall (Before Midnight, Linklater, USA, 2013)
– A couple unable to parent together resulting in violence, hatred, and death: Anatomy of a Fall (Triet, France, 2023) Review by Kate Thompson
– Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Shifting “couple fits”, fluctuating “unconscious couple relations” and the dynamic relationship between different internal figures by Aleksandra Novakovic (Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Nichols, USA, 1966)
– Maestro (Cooper, US, 2023) Review by Marian O’Connor
– The phoenix of alterity by Judith Pickering (Into the Darkest Night, Pickering, Australia, 1977 and Shadowlands, Attenborough, UK, 1993)
BOOK REVIEWS
– Post-traumatic Attachments to the Eerily Moving Image: Something to Watch Over Me by Andrew Asibong. Reviewed by Robert Monzo
– A Jungian Perspective on the Therapist–Patient Relationship in Film: Cinema As Our Therapist by Ruth Netzer. Reviewed by Catriona Wrottesley
About the Editor(s)
Perrine Moran, MA, is a psychodynamic psychotherapist and a couple psychoanalytic psychotherapist. She is a visiting lecturer and supervisor at Tavistock Relationships. She has taught psychoanalytic couple theory internationally as well as on two master’s programmes at Tavistock Relationships. She was a supervisor at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust. She is the arts editor for Couple and Family Psychoanalysis, and a member of the editorial board of the Revue of the International Association for Couple and Family Psychoanalysis. She is bilingual, works with individuals and couples in English and in French, and has a private practice in London.
Before training as a psychotherapist, Perrine Moran was a lecturer in French literature at the University of London, and an actress in Paris, where she ran a fringe theatre in the basement of a Cuban restaurant.
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