Interpretive Voices

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Affective Screen
Aid Virus
Analyst's Capacity
Analyst's Counter-transference
Analyst’s Capacity
Analyst’s Counter-transference
analytic process in psychotherapy
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Chronic Doubt
Chronic Self-doubt
clinical interpretation
David Morgan
Debbie Bandler Bellman
Depressive Position Functioning
Destructive Narcissism
Ego Destructive Superego
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Erotic Transference
External Phan Tasy Object
Extra-transference Interpretations
Freud's Structural Model
Freud’s Structural Model
Human Suffering
Internal Cohabitation
Interpretive Voice
Joscelyn Richards
Julia Sandelson
Lesley Caldwell
Lesley Steyn
Logico Deductive System
Maternal Erotic Transference
Michael Halton
Patient's Projective Identifications
Patient's Psychic Reality
Patient’s Projective Identifications
Patient’s Psychic Reality
philosophical psychology
Preferred Abstinence
projective identification
psychoanalytic theory
Relation Ships
Sara Collins
Simon Archer
superego dynamics
therapeutic empathy
Transvestite Activity
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367102166
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 159 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The contributions in this book exemplify ways in which different analysts think about and treat the issue of interpretation, illustrating the distinctiveness with which an analyst expresses his or her own personality, creativity, and understanding within the medium of psychoanalysis. Entering the realm of the philosophical concept of the particularised universal in which the general concept finds its expression not in abstraction but only in its particular manifestation, each analyst construes the theories and body of knowledge of psychoanalysis in his or her own way. The editors believe that the analytic process can embrace not only different theoretical views, but also differences in how we listen to and communicate with our patients, the expressions of which create an analytic climate with its own particular diction, vocabulary, and distinctive voice. The individual voice is implicit in the literature, capable of being demonstrated, and an important factor in the analytic process.
Jean Arundale