Languages of Psychoanalysis

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A01=John E. Gedo
affective neuroscience
Analysand's Personality Structure
Analysand's Subjectivity
analytic setting
Apraxic Deficits
archaic
Archaic Transference
Ariadne Auf Naxos
association
Author_John E. Gedo
Budapest School
Category=JMAF
Characterological Attitudes
College Professor
Concord Grapes
consensual
Consensual Language
Conversion Hysteria
countertransference dynamics
Developmental Arrest
Dyadic Enactment
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ferenczi's Clinical Diary
free
identification
Individual's Communicative Repertory
intrapsychic processes
Katerina Ivanovna
Mad North Northwest
Mental Fog
Mucous Colitis
Mysterious Leap
negative
Nonspecific Beneficial Effects
nonverbal cues in psychoanalytic treatment
projective
projective identification
reactions
Referential Activity
Self-analytic Activities
Successful Analytic Treatment
therapeutic
therapeutic empathy
transference
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780881631869
  • Weight: 570g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 1996
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In this remarkable survey of "the communicative repertory of humans," John Gedo demonstrates the central importance to theory and therapeutics of the communication of information. He begins by surveying those modes of communication encountered in psychoanalysis that go beyond the lexical meaning of verbal dialogue, including "the music of speech," various protolinguistic phenomena, and the language of the body. Then, turning to the analytic dialogue, Gedo explores the implications of these alternative modes of communication for psychoanalytic technique. Individual chapters focus, in turn, on the creation of a "shared language" between analyst and analysand, the consequences of the analytic setting, the form in which the analyst casts particular interventions, the curative limits of empathy, the analyst's affectivity and its communication to the patient, and the semiotic significance of countertransference and projective identification.

Gedo does not proffer semiotics as a substitute for metapsychology. He is explicit that communicative skill is always dependdent on somatic events within the central nervous system. Indeed, it is because Gedo's hierarchical approach to communication builds on our current understanding of a hierarchically organized central nervous system that his clincal observations become insights into basic psychobiological functioning. Grounded in Gedo's four decades of clinical experience, The Languages of Psychoanalysis points to a new venue of clinical research and conceptualization, one in which attentiveness to issues of communication will not only foster linkages with contemporary neuroscience, but also clarify and enlarge the therapeutic possibilities of psychoanalytic treatment.

John E. Gedo, M.D., retired in 1990 as Training and Supervising Analyst, Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis. He is the author of numerous books for Analytic Press, including The Biology of Clinical Encounters (1991) and The Mind in Disorder (1998).

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