The Winnicott tradition /
This volume in a book series on psychoanalytic leaders, provides a geographically global sampler of writing stemming from Winnicott's complex and paradoxical thinking. In the first section, on his work and legacy, his thinking is put into a context to reveal something of the origins, significan...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
London :
Karnac Books,
2015.
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Colección: | Lines of development.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- COVER; CONTENTS; ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS; ABOUT THE EDITORS AND CONTRIBUTORS; SERIES EDITORS' FOREWORD; INTRODUCTION; PART I WINNICOTT: HIS WORK AND LEGACY; SECTION INTRODUCTION; CHAPTER ONE Has Winnicott become a Winnicottian?; CHAPTER TWO Winnicott's constant search for the life that feels real; CHAPTER THREE "People who think in pictures": the continuing dialogue between Marion Milner and Donald Winnicott in Bothered by Alligators; CHAPTER FOUR Unassimilated aggression and the emergence of the unit self: Winnicott, Jung, and Matte Blanco.
- CHAPTER FIVE Winnicott and Bion: claiming alternate legaciesCHAPTER SIX Winnicott's anni horribiles: the biographical roots of "Hate in the counter-transference"; CHAPTER SEVEN Between Winnicott and Lacan; CHAPTER EIGHT A measure of agreement: an exploration of the relationship of Winnicott and Phyllis Greenacre; PART II CLINICAL WORK AND APPLICATIONS OF WINNICOTT'S TRADITION; SECTION INTRODUCTION; CHAPTER NINE On potential space; CHAPTER TEN Creating connections; CHAPTER ELEVEN The paternal function in Winnicott: the psychoanalytical frame, becoming human.
- CHAPTER TWELVE "Where we start from": thinking with Winnicott and Lacan about the care of homeless adultsCHAPTER THIRTEEN Seeing and being seen: the psychodynamics of pornography through the lens of Winnicott's thought; CHAPTER FOURTEEN The isolate and the stranger: Winnicott's model of subjectivity and its implications for theory andtechnique; CHAPTER FIFTEEN Hatred and helping: working with our own fear and narcissistic rage; CHAPTER SIXTEEN "I feel that you are introducing a big problem. I never became human. I have missed it."
- CHAPTER SEVENTEEN The analyst's oscillating between interpreting and not interpreting: a peculiar Winnicottian point of view on interpreting and not interpretingCHAPTER EIGHTEEN Maternal perinatal mental illness: the baby's unexperienced breakdown; CHAPTER NINETEEN Mind the gap: dysynchrony in the writings of Winnicott and associated clinical thoughts; PART III SPECIALISED WORK IN THE WINNICOTT TRADITION; SECTION INTRODUCTION; CHAPTER TWENTY The importance of being seen: Winnicott, dance movement psychotherapy, and the embodied experience; CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE The location of authenticity.
- CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO Transitional/transitive-pictures from an exhibitionCHAPTER TWENTY-THREE The seriousness of playfulness; CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR Maternal form in artistic creation; CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE Ways of being: transitional objects and the work of art; CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX Unintegrated states and the process of integration: a new formulation; CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN The reflected self; CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT "Oedipus, schmedipus: so long as he loves his mother": teaching Winnicott to a non-analytic audience; PART IV PERSONAL AND THEORETICAL REFLECTIONS FROM CLINICIANS; SECTION INTRODUCTION.