Beschreibung:

VIII; 228 S.; 22 cm. Originalleinen mit Schutzumschlag.

Bemerkung:

Gutes Ex. - Englisch. - Series of the Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis, edited by George H. Pollock, M.D., Ph.D. / What are the effects of analysis? It is in answering this question that Nathan Schlessinger and Fred Robbins arrive at their developmental approach to analytic practice. Through their intensive follow-up studies, the authors are able to identify key variables in the psychoanalytic process and assess the implications for both theory and technique. What emerges from their review of the clinical material gathered in the follow-up study is the importance of the self-analytic function as a learned mode of coping with conflict. Equally striking is the exploration of the enduring significance of the analytic alliance in regulating tension. The impact of these findings on clinical work is suggested by the presentation of some cases whose management was facilitated by the ongoing research. As a result of their studies, Schlessinger and Robbins propose an elaboration of ideas on symptom formation and a reconceptualization of defense transference. In effect, they argue for the significance of early developmental vicissitudes in character formation and neurotic conflict. ? (Verlagstext) / INHALT : Foreword - George H. Pollock ---- Perspective ---- PART I CLINICAL STUDIES ---- Chapter 1 Assessment and Follow-Up in Psychoanalysis: The Method of Study ---- Chapter 2 An Illustration of the Method of Study ---- Chapter 3 The Fate of the Transference Neurosis: Recurrent Patterns of Conflict and Changes in Ego Functions ---- Chapter 4 The Psychoanalytic Situation in a Development Context: The Fate of the Analytic Alliance ---- Chapter 5 A Clinical Study of the Defense Transference ---- Chapter 6 Tension Regulation in the Development of a Self-Analytic Function ---- (u.a.m.) ISBN 0823612570