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The Infinity of the Unsaid offers an expansion of the theory of unformulated experience that has important implications for clinical thinking and practice; it will be of great interest to psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists across all schools of thought.
List of contents
Chapter 1: Introduction: Meaningfulness: More than Just Words Chapter 2: Articulation: The Formulation of Verbal-Reflective Meaning Chapter 3: Realization: The Formulation of Nonverbal Meaning Chapter 4: Manifestation: The Underlying Unity of Verbal and Nonverbal Meaning; Appendix
About the author
Donnel B. Stern is Training and Supervising Analyst, William Alanson White Institute, New York City and Adjunct Clinical Professor of Psychology and Clinical Consultant, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. He is the founder and editor of the Routledge Psychoanalysis in a New Key Book Series and author and editor of many articles and books. His most recent authored book is Relational Freedom: Emergent Properties of the Interpersonal Field (2015).
Summary
The Infinity of the Unsaid offers an expansion of the theory of unformulated experience that has important implications for clinical thinking and practice; it will be of great interest to psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists across all schools of thought.
Additional text
"Stern is famous for confronting our "Hard Question:" What were our patients’ meanings before they were worded, and how is that affected by those and subsequent words? Almost every question in psychoanalysis leads there, making Stern’s book indispensable for the practitioner, who will gain a realistically hopeful view oftheir daily work from Stern’s picture of the relationship between words, life, and the expressive states in between. And Stern’s account of his progressive revisions is a virtual education in how to think about the human condition."-Lawrence Friedman, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Weill-Cornell Medical College
"Don Stern is a theoretician’s theorizer and a clinician’s right-hand.He writes of realms that elude our grasp yet are where we need to go - the space between words, that ineffable sense that ‘vibrates’ with the spoken word.He is a poet of the nonverbal, unformulated, unsaid - the real - and writes in a conversational yet highly sophisticated style. Talking therapy has thus expanded as Stern takes his rightful place among the leading psychoanalytic thinkers of today, depolarizing their global reach. Read this book, it will help you."-Andrea Celenza, Ph.D., Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute, author ofErotic Revelations: Clinical Applications and Perverse Scenarios
"In this exciting new book Donnel Stern extends his earlier creative and courageous inquiries into the nature of meaning and meaning-making. Meaning is not contained simply in what is or can be put into words or symbolized, Stern teaches. Rather, meaning is like the air we breathe, we are immersed in it without being able to point to it. As his title promises, Stern guides us to appreciate the "infinity" of our potential experience, the limits of what we can know at any moment, and the awe we feel when we glimpse what might have been understood but never will be. The book is a guide not only for psychoanalysts and other therapists, but for anybody who can appreciate the richness and complexity of what it is to be human."-Jay Greenberg, Ph.D., Editor, The Psychoanalytic Quarterly
"The imaginativeness and depth of Donnel Stern’s contribution to contemporary psychoanalysis is fully on display in this book. We have the extraordinary opportunity to join Stern in returning to his groundbreaking conceptualization of unformulated experience. This journey is one filled with nuance and depth regarding verbal and nonverbal experience and how translating unformulated experience can lead to spontaneous creative living. Stern displays great subtlety in putting our experiences as patients and analysts into words. Through his considerable capacity for syncretic thinking, he invites us to consider his contributions in relation to a number of theorists. This is a book not just to read but to study."-Steven H. Cooper, Ph.D., Associate Professor in Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, USA