Seduction, Surrender, and Transformation

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A01=Karen J. Maroda
affective
affective communication techniques
Affective Responding
Alexithymic Patients
Analyst's Feelings
Analyst's Part
Analyst's Past
analytic subjectivity
Author_Karen J. Maroda
borderline
Borderline Personality Disorder
Category=JMAF
clinical psychoanalysis
communication
countertransference
Countertransference Dominance
countertransference dynamics
Developmental Arrest
disorder
emotional attunement
Emotional Honesty
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
identification
interplay
Masochistic Submission
Mutual Projective Identifications
Mutual Surrender
Patient's Projective Identifications
Patient's Re-creation
Persona
personality
Physical Contact
projective
Projective Counteridentification
projective identification
Reciprocal Mutual Influence
Resourceless Dependence
Superb
Term Projective Identification
therapist-patient interaction
transference
Transference Countertransference Interplay
Vice Versa
Violate

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138137745
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Jan 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Seduction, Surrender, and Transformation demonstrates how interpersonal psychoanalysis obliges analysts to engage their patients with genuine emotional responsiveness, so that not only the patient but the analyst too is open to ongoing transformation through the analytic experience. In so doing, the analyst moves from the position of an "interpreting observer" to that of an "active participant and facilitator" whose affective communications enable the patient to acquire basic self-trust along with self-knowledge.

Drawing on the current literature on affect, Maroda argues that psychological change occurs through affect-laden interpersonal processes. Given that most patients in psychotherapy have problems with affect management, the completing of cycles of affective communication between therapist and patient becomes a vitally important aspect of the therapeutic enterprise. Through emotionally open responses to their patients and careful use of patient-prompted self-disclosures, analysts can facilitate affect regulation responsibly and constructively, with the emphasis always remaining on the patients' experience.

Moments of mutual surrender - the honest emotional giving over of patient to analyst and analyst to patient - epitomize the emotionally intense interpersonal experiences that lead to enduring intrapsychic change. Maroda's work is profoundly personal. She does not hesitate to share with the reader how her own personality affects her thinking and her work. Indeed, she believes her theoretical and clinical preferences are emblematic of the way in which the analyst's subjectivity necessarily shapes theory choice and practice preferences in general. Seduction, Surrender, and Transfomation is not only a powerful brief for emotional honesty in the analytic relationship but also a model of the personal openness that, according to Maroda, psychoanalysis demands of all its practitioners.

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