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This book is Donnel B. Stern's latest contribution to the kind of understanding of psychotherapeutic and psychoanalytic process offered by field theory.
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This book is Donnel B. Stern's latest contribution to the kind of understanding of psychotherapeutic and psychoanalytic process offered by field theory.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 306
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. September 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm
- ISBN-13: 9781032688916
- ISBN-10: 1032688912
- Artikelnr.: 70147587
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 306
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. September 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm
- ISBN-13: 9781032688916
- ISBN-10: 1032688912
- Artikelnr.: 70147587
Donnel B. Stern, training and supervising analyst, member of the faculty at the William Alanson White Institute, and adjunct clinical professor of psychology at New York University.
1. Introduction: Transformations of the Interpersonal Field Part One: The
Formulation of Experience in the Clinical Situation 2. On Coming into
Possession of Oneself: Witnessing and the Formulation of Experience 3.
Distance and Relation: Emerging from Embeddedness in the Other 4.
Interpretation: Voice of the Field 5. Feels Like Me: Formulating the
Embodied Mind 6. How Does History Become Accessible? Reconstruction as an
Emergent Product of the Interpersonal Field 7. How I Work with Unconscious
Process, Part 1: A Case Example 8. How I Work with Unconscious Process,
Part 2: The Emergence of Meaning from Unformulated Experience Part Two:
Dissociation 9. Dissociation and Unformulated Experience: A Psychoanalytic
Model of Mind 10. Unformulated Experience, Dissociation, and
Nachträglichkeit 11. Dissociative Multiplicity and Unformulated Experience:
Commentary on Diamond 12. Dissociative Enactment and Interpellation
13. From Interpersonal Field to Mind in the Work of Philip M. Bromberg
Part Three: Comparative Studies 14. Field Theory and the Dream Sense:
Continuing the Comparison of Interpersonal/Relational Theory and Bionian
Field Theory 15. Otherness within Psychoanalysis: On Recognizing the
Critics of Relational Psychoanalysis 16. Can There be a Psychoanalysis
Without Unconscious Phantasy? Unformulated Experience and the Multiple Self
Formulation of Experience in the Clinical Situation 2. On Coming into
Possession of Oneself: Witnessing and the Formulation of Experience 3.
Distance and Relation: Emerging from Embeddedness in the Other 4.
Interpretation: Voice of the Field 5. Feels Like Me: Formulating the
Embodied Mind 6. How Does History Become Accessible? Reconstruction as an
Emergent Product of the Interpersonal Field 7. How I Work with Unconscious
Process, Part 1: A Case Example 8. How I Work with Unconscious Process,
Part 2: The Emergence of Meaning from Unformulated Experience Part Two:
Dissociation 9. Dissociation and Unformulated Experience: A Psychoanalytic
Model of Mind 10. Unformulated Experience, Dissociation, and
Nachträglichkeit 11. Dissociative Multiplicity and Unformulated Experience:
Commentary on Diamond 12. Dissociative Enactment and Interpellation
13. From Interpersonal Field to Mind in the Work of Philip M. Bromberg
Part Three: Comparative Studies 14. Field Theory and the Dream Sense:
Continuing the Comparison of Interpersonal/Relational Theory and Bionian
Field Theory 15. Otherness within Psychoanalysis: On Recognizing the
Critics of Relational Psychoanalysis 16. Can There be a Psychoanalysis
Without Unconscious Phantasy? Unformulated Experience and the Multiple Self
1. Introduction: Transformations of the Interpersonal Field Part One: The
Formulation of Experience in the Clinical Situation 2. On Coming into
Possession of Oneself: Witnessing and the Formulation of Experience 3.
Distance and Relation: Emerging from Embeddedness in the Other 4.
Interpretation: Voice of the Field 5. Feels Like Me: Formulating the
Embodied Mind 6. How Does History Become Accessible? Reconstruction as an
Emergent Product of the Interpersonal Field 7. How I Work with Unconscious
Process, Part 1: A Case Example 8. How I Work with Unconscious Process,
Part 2: The Emergence of Meaning from Unformulated Experience Part Two:
Dissociation 9. Dissociation and Unformulated Experience: A Psychoanalytic
Model of Mind 10. Unformulated Experience, Dissociation, and
Nachträglichkeit 11. Dissociative Multiplicity and Unformulated Experience:
Commentary on Diamond 12. Dissociative Enactment and Interpellation
13. From Interpersonal Field to Mind in the Work of Philip M. Bromberg
Part Three: Comparative Studies 14. Field Theory and the Dream Sense:
Continuing the Comparison of Interpersonal/Relational Theory and Bionian
Field Theory 15. Otherness within Psychoanalysis: On Recognizing the
Critics of Relational Psychoanalysis 16. Can There be a Psychoanalysis
Without Unconscious Phantasy? Unformulated Experience and the Multiple Self
Formulation of Experience in the Clinical Situation 2. On Coming into
Possession of Oneself: Witnessing and the Formulation of Experience 3.
Distance and Relation: Emerging from Embeddedness in the Other 4.
Interpretation: Voice of the Field 5. Feels Like Me: Formulating the
Embodied Mind 6. How Does History Become Accessible? Reconstruction as an
Emergent Product of the Interpersonal Field 7. How I Work with Unconscious
Process, Part 1: A Case Example 8. How I Work with Unconscious Process,
Part 2: The Emergence of Meaning from Unformulated Experience Part Two:
Dissociation 9. Dissociation and Unformulated Experience: A Psychoanalytic
Model of Mind 10. Unformulated Experience, Dissociation, and
Nachträglichkeit 11. Dissociative Multiplicity and Unformulated Experience:
Commentary on Diamond 12. Dissociative Enactment and Interpellation
13. From Interpersonal Field to Mind in the Work of Philip M. Bromberg
Part Three: Comparative Studies 14. Field Theory and the Dream Sense:
Continuing the Comparison of Interpersonal/Relational Theory and Bionian
Field Theory 15. Otherness within Psychoanalysis: On Recognizing the
Critics of Relational Psychoanalysis 16. Can There be a Psychoanalysis
Without Unconscious Phantasy? Unformulated Experience and the Multiple Self