Ferenczi for Our Time presents contributions from British, French, American and Hungarian analysts of the second, third and even fourth generation, who deal with different dimensions of experiencing the external and internal world. These papers explore linkages between Ferenczi and the works of Winnicott, Klein, Alice, Michael and Enid Balint, the British Independents as well, as French analytical thought related to Dolto and beyond. The reader will also become acquainted with original documents of a revived Hungarian psychoanalytical world and new voices of Budapest. 'The Balints' chapter invites the reader to listen to colleagues sharing memories, recollections and images - allowing a personal glimpse into the life and professional-human environment of these extraordinary personalities.The topics discussed here are wide ranging: possibilities and impossibilities of elaborating social and individual traumata, child analysis and development, body-and-mind and clinical aspects of working with psychosomatic diseases. Functions and dysfunctions of societal and individual memory are explored as signifying 'blinded' spots in our vision of external and psychic reality as well as the vicissitudes of generational transmission of trauma. The scope of these papers covers methodology, theory and clinical practice.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 147 x 230mm
Publication Date: 01 Sep 2012
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781780490403
About
Tom Keve lives and writes in Hampstead London. Born in Budapest he came to England as a refugee in 1956. A scientist by profession with a Ph.D. from Imperial College he is a Fellow of the Institute of Physics. Having travelled much and lived for a number of years in the United States Holland and France as well as England and Hungary he has been exposed to a variety of cultures and is fluent in four languages. Judit Szekacs-Weisz is a bilingual psychoanalyst and psychotherapist a member of the British and the Hungarian Psychoanalytical Society. Born and educated (mostly) in Budapest she has absorbed the ideas and way of thinking of Ferenczi the Balints Hermann and Rajka as integral parts of a professional mother tongue. She is author of several articles and co-editor of 'Lost Childhood and the Language of Exile'. Together with Tom Keve she co-edited 'Ferenczi and His World' and 'Ferenczi for Our Time'.