Transforming Narcissism

Regular price €137.99
A01=Frank M. Lachmann
affective
Affective Responsivity
affective transformation
archaic
Archaic Narcissism
Author_Frank M. Lachmann
bidirectional therapist patient interaction
Category=JM
Category=JMAF
Child's Anxious State
clinical empathy techniques
creative process in therapy
cross-modal
Cross-modal Transfer
Death Anxiety
Der Freischutz
Die Meistersinger
Don Quixote
Duck
Duck Lake
Dyadic Expansion
Empathic Understanding
Empathic Vantage Point
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Heinz Kohut theory
Implicit Relational Knowing
interactive
Isaac Stern
model
Model Scene
Nondepressed Mothers
regulation
relational psychoanalysis
responsivity
scenes
self-and
Self-and Interactive Regulation
Temporal Continuity
therapeutic spontaneity
Trailing Edge
transfer
Violated
Vocal Rhythm Coordination
Walther Von Stolzing
Wisdom Literature
Younger Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780881634686
  • Weight: 492g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Dec 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Using Kohut's seminal paper "Forms and Transformations of Narcissism" as a springboard, Frank Lachmann updates Kohut's proposals for contemporary clinicians. Transforming Narcissism: Reflections on Empathy, Humor, and Expectations draws on a wide range of contributions from empirical infant research, psychoanalytic and psychotherapeutic practice, social psychology, and autobiographies of creative artists to expand and modify Kohut's proposition that archaic narcissism is transformed in the course of development or through treatment into empathy, humor, creativity, an acceptance of transience and wisdom.

He asserts that empathy, humor, and creativity are not the goals or end products of transformations, but are an intrinsic part of the ongoing therapist-patient dialogue throughout treatment. The transformative process is bidirectional, impacting both patient and therapist, and their affect undergoes transformation - for example from detached to intimate - and narcissism or self-states are transformed secondarily as a consequence of the affective interactions. Meeting or violating expectations of emotional responsivity provides a major pathway for transformation of affect.

For beginning therapists, Transforming Narcissism presents an engaging approach to treatment that incorporates the therapeutic action of these transformations, but also leaves room for therapists to develop styles of their own. For more experienced therapists, it fills a conceptual and clinical gap, provides a scaffold for crucial aspects of treatment that are often unacknowledged (because they are not "analytic"), or are dismissed and pejoratively labeled "countertransference." Most importantly, Lachmann offers a balance between therapeutic spontaneity and professional constraint. Focused and engaging, Transforming Narcissism provides a bridge from self psychology to a rainbow of relational approaches that beginning and seasoned therapists can profitably traverse in either direction.

Dr. Lachmann contributed to an article on empathy in the April, 2008 issue of O magazine, pp. 230.

Frank M. Lachmann, Ph.D., is a founding faculty member of the Institute for the Psychoanalytic Study of Subjectivity, Training and Supervising Analyst, Postgraduate Center for Mental Health, and Clinical Assistant Professor at the NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. He has contributed over 100 articles to the journal literature, and is author of Transforming Aggression (Aronson, 2000), and co-author of Self and Motivational Systems (TAP, 1992), The Clinical Exchange (TAP, 1996), and Infant Research and Adult Treatment (TAP, 2002).