Beyond the Symbiotic Orbit

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Anorexia Nervosa
Category=JMAF
Category=JMH
childhood psychopathology
clinical separation individuation applications
CNS Immaturity
conflicts
constancy
crisis
Drive Derivative
Early Childhood Attachment Experiences
Eating Disorder
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Feeding Disorder
Hostile Destructiveness
Impulse Control
individuation
Kohut self psychology
Libidinal Object Constancy
Maternal Mental Representations
Normal Autistic Phase
Normal Symbiotic Phase
object
object relations theory
oedipal
Phallic Oedipal Phase
Preoedipal Pathology
Primary Feminine Identification
process
psychoanalytic developmental models
psychosomatic disorders
rapprochement
Rapprochement Crisis
Rapprochement Subphase
Representational Differentiation
separation
Separation Individuation Issues
Separation Individuation Phase
Separation Individuation Process
Separation Individuation Theory
theory
Vice Versa
Winnicott comparison
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367606466
  • Weight: 870g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In this tribute to Selma Kramer, eminent child analyst and colleague and close friend of the late Margaret Mahler, senior analysts explore the continuing relevance of Mahler's separation-individuation theory to developmental and clinical issues. Editors Salman Akhtar and Henri Parens have grouped the original contributions to Beyond the Symbiotic Orbit into sections that reevaluate Mahler's theory.

Section I is a timely reassessment of Mahler's working model from the standpoint of contemporary clinical and research findings. It includes comparisons of Mahler with Winnicott and Kohut, and commentaries on the status of separation-individuation theory in relation to psychosexual theory, early ego development, and observational infancy research. Section II addresses the contribution of separation-individuation theory to our understanding of pathogenesis. Neurosis, severe character pathology, psychosomatic phenomena, eating disorders, and sexual perversions are among the topics of specific chapters. The final section explores the role of separation-individuation theory in the treatment of analysands of different ages and with different kinds of psychopathology; it also considers separation-individuation theory with respect to specific aspects of the treatment process, including reconstruction, transference, and termination.

A fresh reappraisal of a major perspective on early development, Beyond the Symbiotic Orbit is a fitting testimonial to Selma Kramer, who has played so important a role in elaborating Mahler's theory. Following from Kramer's own example, the contributors show how separation-individuation theory, in its ability to accomodate ongoing clinical and research findings, is subject to continuing growth and refinement. They not only advance our understanding of Mahler's working model, but pursue the implications of this model in new directions, underscoring the many areas of exploration that separation-individuation theory opens to us.

Salman Akhtar, M.D., is a faculty member of the Philadelphia Psychoanalytic Institute, and Professor of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Jefferson Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University. He is editor of New Psychiatric Syndromes: DSM-III and Beyond (1983) and coeditor of The Trauma of Transgression (1991).

Henri Parens, M.D., is Training and Supervising Analyst, Philadelphia Psychoanalytic Institute, and Professor of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Jefferson Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University. He is author of Dependence in Man (1971) and The Development of Aggression in Early Childhood (1979) and coauthor of Aggression in Our Children (1987).