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Mourning and the importance of the capacity to bear some
helplessness, while still finding pleasure in life, are central to
this tightly organized volume. The multi-faceted processes involved
in mourning and adaptation are addressed.
2021 Gradiva Award Winner The Piggle is one of the most famous and
beloved child cases in the history of psychoanalysis. A
two-year-old girl suffering from terrible nightmares, depression,
and self-harming behaviours, the Piggle, came to Donald Winnicott
for treatment. In writing up the case and allowing it to be
published (with the posthumous help of his wife Clare and his
student, Ishak Ramsey), Winnicott invited the world into his
consulting room and allowed the inner world of the very young child
to be seen. Seven psychoanalysts rediscover the Piggle, meeting her
as an adult, re-scrutinising the case as it was formulated by
Winnicott, and suggesting new understandings of the Piggle's
material. Introduced by a foreword from Angela Joyce, the book
features an interview with the adult Piggle, discussing her
recollections of the treatment and her view of its impact many
years on, as well as a meticulous historical overview from an
investigation of 'The Piggle' archive revealing previously unknown
information, a critical, detailed reappraisal of the case, and
reflections from several authors on how modern psychoanalytic
technique might be applied to the case were the Piggle to be seen
in 2020. In this age, when the voice of the child needs to be heard
more than ever, Finding The Piggle gives new life to this classic
piece of psychoanalytic literature in which the importance of the
child's feelings and conflicts is made abundantly clear. With this
comprehensive exploration, a new generation of clinicians and
others can rediscover this important case and think about it anew.
For many years, debate has raged as to whether children are capable
of embarking on a true mourning process. In When a Child Grieves,
Corinne Masur provides an excellent overview of the myriad
psychoanalytic theories on the subject and demonstrates
conclusively that children can and do mourn. She describes how
children and adolescents experience grief and how the mourning
process can go awry. Dr Masur provides ample guidelines for the
evaluation and treatment of children and adolescents struggling
with their grief, alongside a multitude of clinical examples to
illustrate her salient points. One detailed and poignant case
history is returned to throughout the book, that of a
three-year-old who lost his father to suicide. This sensitive and
important work fills a void in the literature and will become a key
text for trainees and qualified psychoanalysts, psychotherapists,
clinicians, and other professionals working with bereaved children.
This volume covers a much-neglected topic: the avoidance by
psychotherapists and psychoanalysts of the topic of their own
mortality and that of their patients. All too often, the
psychotherapist or psychoanalyst who is ill is unable to confront
this reality in the presence of her patient and fails to prepare
the patient for the most permanent goodbye, death. This volume
includes nine essays which consider why the psychotherapist and
psychoanalyst may find illness, mortality, retirement and
termination so difficult. This volume is a collection of essays by
psychoanalysts covering the denial of death amongst
psychotherapists and psychoanalysts and the effect on clinical
practice, the effect of early childhood confrontation with
mortality on the professional development of psychoanalysts,
illness in the analyst, the death of patients, and termination and
retirement as symbolic harbingers of death.
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