Between Winnicott and Lacan

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analytic technique
Anglo American Psychoanalysts
Bad Internalized Object Relations
Basic Neurosis
Borromean Knot
British Psycho Analytical Society
Category=JMAF
Clinical Practice
clinical psychoanalysis
Creative Living
donald
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Foundational Lack
Freudienne De Paris
Ich
Incommunicado Element
integrating relational and structural models
jacques
Key Word
Le Moi
mirror
Mother's Facial Expression
Narcissistic Fantasies
object
object relations theory
Outpatient Clinic
Paranoid Patient
phenomena
post-Freudian theory
potential
primary
Ruthless Character
space
stage
subject development
Subject's Capacity
Subject's Psychic Life
Teddy Bear
transitional
Transitional Object
transitional phenomena
Winnicott's Transitional Object
Winnicott's Work
Wooden Spool

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415883740
  • Weight: 360g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Feb 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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D. W. Winnicott and Jacques Lacan, two of the most innovative and important psychoanalytic theorists since Freud, are also seemingly the most incompatible. And yet, in different ways, both men emphasized the psychic process of becoming a subject or of developing a separate self, and both believed in the possibility of a creative reworking or new beginning for the person seeking psychoanalytic help. The possibility of working between their contrasting perspectives on a central issue for psychoanalysis - the nature of the human subject and how it can be approached in analytic work - is explored in this book. Their differences are critically evaluated, with an eye toward constructing a more effective psychoanalytic practice that takes both relational and structural-linguistic aspects of subjectivity into account. The contributors address the Winnicott-Lacan relationship itself and the evolution of their ideas, and provide detailed examples of how they have been utilized in psychoanalytic work with patients.

Contributors: Jeanne Wolff Bernstein, James Gorney, Andre Green, Mardi Ireland, Lewis Kirshner, Deborah Luepnitz, Mari Ruti, Alain Vanier, Francois Villa .

Lewis Kirshner, M.D., is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, and Training and Supervising Analyst, Boston Psychoanalytic Institute. He is the author of Having a Life: Self Pathology after Lacan (Analytic Press, 2003), and has led workshops and meetings of the American Psychoanalytic and International Psychoanalytical Associations on "Working between Winnicott and Lacan."