Michael Fordham was a friend of Jung, made many major contributions to analytical psychology. This volume brings together his key writings on analytical technique. They are important because they have shaped and informed analytical technique as we find it today. These writings will be welcomed by
Analyst-Patient Interaction : Collected Papers on Technique.
β Scribed by Fordham, Michael; Shamdasani, Sonu
- Publisher
- Taylor and Francis
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 225
- Edition
- 1st ed.
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Michael Fordham was a friend of Jung, made many major contributions to analytical psychology. This volume brings together his key writings on analytical technique. They are important because they have shaped and informed analytical technique as we find it today. These writings will be welcomed by both trainee and practising analysts.
β¦ Table of Contents
Book Cover --
Title --
Copyright --
Contents --
Introduction --
NOTE --
POSTSCRIPT, 1995 --
Chapter 1 Notes on the transference (1957) --
PART 1. INTRODUCTION --
PART II. GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS --
The analytic interview --
'Naturalness' versus 'artificiality' of the transference --
Analysis and life --
Energy distributions --
'Acting out' --
A projection-perception scale --
PART III. PARTICULAR TRANSFERENCE MANIFESTATIONS --
The dependent transference --
The objective transference --
PART IV. COUNTER-TRANSFERENCE --
(a) Use and definition of the term --
(b) Counter-transference illusion --
(c) The syntonic counter-transference --
Amplification --
Conclusion --
Chapter 2 Counter-transference (1960) --
Illusory counter-transference --
Syntonic counter-transference --
NOTE --
Chapter 3 Suggestions towards a theory of supervision (1961) --
NOTE --
Chapter 4 Reply to Dr Edinger (1961) --
NOTE --
Chapter 5 A comment on James Hillman's papers (1962) --
NOTES --
Chapter 6 Problems of a training analyst (undated) --
CANDIDATE'S ASSESSMENT OF HIMSELF --
"THE SUPPORTING ANALYST" --
SOCIETY POLICY AND THE TRAINING ANALYST --
CONCLUSIONS TO HEADING --
ANALYSIS DURING TRAINING --
APPLICATION FOR ASSOCIATE PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIP --
ANALYSIS AFTER ACCEPTANCE OR REJECTION --
THE RELATION BETWEEN THE TRAINING ANALYST AND THE NEW MEMBER OF THE SOCIETY --
THE TRAINING ANALYSIS ITSELF --
NOTE --
Chapter 7 Reflections on training analysis (1968) --
INTRODUCTION --
THE TRAINING SITUATION --
PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND THE ANALYSIS OF CHILDHOOD --
ENDING OF THE TRAINING ANALYSIS --
Chapter 8 Technique and counter-transference (1969) --
PART I Introduction --
Jung's contributions --
'The actual present' --
The individual and the collective --
Summary --
Personal note --
PART II Technique --
Counter-transference --
An analytic episode --
Technique in psychotic states --
Summary. Chapter 9 Reply to Plaut's 'Comment' (1970) --
NOTE --
Chapter 10 The interrelation between patient and therapist (1972) --
NOTE --
Chapter 11 Jung's conception of transference (1974) --
INTRODUCTION --
PART I 'The theory of psychoanalysis' --
'Some crucial points in psychoanalysis' --
'The therapeutic value of abreaction' --
Discussion --
PART II 'Two essays on analytical psychology' --
PART III 'Analytical psychology-its theory and practice' --
PART IV 'The psychology of the transference' --
PART V A clinical application --
PART VI: DISCUSSION --
NOTES --
Chapter 12 Defences of the self (1974) --
EGO DEFENCES --
TRANSFERENCE PSYCHOSIS --
COUNTER-TRANSFERENCE --
TECHNICAL FAULTS --
ANALYTIC METHOD --
TOKENS --
INFANTILE ROOTS --
A NOTE ON THEORY --
Chapter 13 Analyst-patient interaction (1975) --
PART I --
PART II --
NOTE --
Chapter 14 Discussion of Thomas B. Kirsch, 'The practice of multiple analysis in analytical psychology' (1976) --
NOTE --
Chapter 15 Analytical psychology and counter-transference (1979) --
CLINICAL EXAMPLE --
THE ANALYST'S ERRORS --
DEVIATIONS FROM THE ANALYTIC ATTITUDE --
PATIENT A. --
PATIENT B. --
A CONCLUDING STATEMENT --
NOTES --
Chapter 16 Contribution to symposium 'How do I assess progress in supervision?' (1982) --
Chapter 17 How I do analysis (1988) --
LISTENING AND LEARNING FROM PATIENTS --
THE USE OF MYTHS --
NOTE --
Chapter 18 Fordham's rejoinder to Spiegelman's comments (1988) --
NOTE --
Chapter 19 The supposed limits of interpretation (1991) --
INTRODUCTION --
EXAMPLE ONE: DETECTING A PROJECTIVE IDENTIFICATION --
EXAMPLE TWO: THE USELESSNESS OF INTERPRETATIONS --
DISCUSSION --
Chapter 20 Rejoinder to Nathan Schwartz-Salant (1991) --
Chapter 21 On not knowing beforehand (1993) --
INTERVIEW 1 --
INTERVIEW 2 --
INTERVIEW 3 --
SUMMARY --
Sources --
Bibliography --
Index.
β¦ Subjects
Psychoanalysis;Psychotherapist and patient
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