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First published in 1993. Within this classic volume can be heard
the wise and compassionate voice of an analyst in constant motion,
carefully and respectfully map ping new territories in the
understanding of the human psyche. Dr. McDougall is vigilant in her
attention to the ongoing dialogue between the patient's inner drama
and her own internal world, not willing to stay planted safely in
the realm of existing precepts, favoring instead a position of
evolving creativity. At the center of this fascinating book stand
Dr. McDougall's patients -those individuals labelled abnormal by
some, but who, for the author, represent the most challenging
encounters. Exploring such topics as The Sexual Scene and the
Anonymous Spectator, Creation and Sexual Deviation, The Psychosoma
and the Psychoanalytic Process, and Plea for a Measure of
Abnormality, Dr. McDougall celebrates the wide range of human
difference. In the author's words: This book contains a trajectory
of reflection on the experience I have shared with my analysands
over a period of years, for the psychoanalytic adventure, like a
love affair, requires two people. At the foundation of her work,
then, is the need to call into question again and again not only
the psychoanalyst's skill, but her identity. This book reveals both
the human and practical imperative behind that commitment.
Using the theatre as a central metaphor, this text provides a
flexible framework to explore the psychic realities of the
characters within us. Case studies underscore how different kinds
of patients construct particular fantasies as a response to the
pain of earlier life scenarios.
The current diversity in psychoanalytic theories of hysteria has
confused our understanding of the concept. Matrix of Hysteria
offers a new perspective, which draws on previous theories to
present a clear and cohesive view of the theoretical and clinical
aspects of hysteria. Drawing on extensive experience in analytic
work, supervision and teaching, Nitza Yarom employs clinical
vignettes to offer the reader an illuminating account of this
subject. The book is divided into two sections, covering clinical
and theoretical issues and including discussion of subjects such
as: *Oedipus, Sexuality and Gender *An Intrapsychic Perspective on
the Matrix *The Language of the Intersubjective Body *Hysteria and
the Analytic Setting *Trauma and Hysteria Psychoanalysts and
psychoanalytic psychotherapists in training and practice will
welcome this original insight into the subject of hysteria.
This book presents the Donald Winnicott Memorial Lecture, an annual
event designed for a wide audience of professionals and other
involved with children. These lectures focus upon a specific topic,
arising from Winnicott's life and ideas, in terms of relevance for
twenty-first century living.
First published in 1993. Within this classic volume can be heard
the wise and compassionate voice of an analyst in constant motion,
carefully and respectfully map ping new territories in the
understanding of the human psyche. Dr. McDougall is vigilant in her
attention to the ongoing dialogue between the patient's inner drama
and her own internal world, not willing to stay planted safely in
the realm of existing precepts, favoring instead a position of
evolving creativity. At the center of this fascinating book stand
Dr. McDougall's patients -those individuals labelled abnormal by
some, but who, for the author, represent the most challenging
encounters. Exploring such topics as The Sexual Scene and the
Anonymous Spectator, Creation and Sexual Deviation, The Psychosoma
and the Psychoanalytic Process, and Plea for a Measure of
Abnormality, Dr. McDougall celebrates the wide range of human
difference. In the author's words: This book contains a trajectory
of reflection on the experience I have shared with my analysands
over a period of years, for the psychoanalytic adventure, like a
love affair, requires two people. At the foundation of her work,
then, is the need to call into question again and again not only
the psychoanalyst's skill, but her identity. This book reveals both
the human and practical imperative behind that commitment.
Using the theatre as a central metaphor, this text provides a flexible framework to explore the psychic realities of the characters within us. Case studies underscore how different kinds of patients construct particular fantasies as a response to the pain of earlier life scenarios.
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Using the idiom of drama, Joyce McDougall here describes how we
play out compulsive scripts in our lives, inner worlds, symptoms
and in the therapeutic transference.
McDougall looks at people who react to psychological distress
through somatic manifestations, and at the psychosomatic potential
of individuals in those moments when habitual psychological ways of
coping are overwhelmed, and the body pantomimes the mind's
distress.
This pioneering study shows that it is possible to establish a
dialogue with a psychotic child and that schizophrenia in small
children in treatable.
This is Joyce McDougall's most comprehensive clinical and
theoretical book. Its title conveys her tolerant stance toward
human differences and forms of deviance. It is among the wisest and
best-loved psychoanalytic works ever written.
The Compulsion to Create: Women Writers and Their Demon Lovers is a
fascinating and informative psychological survey of women and the
literature they create, especially as reflected by the lives and
work of such luminaries as Charlotte Bronte, Emily Bronte, Emily
Dickinson, Anais Nin, Sylvia Plath, and Edith Sitwell. The reader
is treated to such issues as compulsion versus reparation,
developmental mourning and creative-process reparation, creative
women and the "internal father," and the "demon-lover" theme as
literary myth and psychodynamic complex. A highly recommended
addition to women's studies, literary studies, and psychological
studies supplemental reading lists, "The Compulsion to Create" is
original, revealing, insightful, challenging, at times
iconoclastic, and always entertaining.
'Theaters of the Body is a landmark contribution to the study of
the psychosoma by one of the world's most important psychoanalytic
thinkers and clinicians. In this book, Joyce McDougall presents a
bold and exciting recasting of the psychoanalytic approach to the
fascinating question of the relationship between the mind and the
body.
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