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Zusatztext Someone had to write this book. What becomes quickly obvious is that only Mitchell Wilson could have done so, and for the very reasons he lays out in this treasure of a volume. ... His work is unpretentious, intimate, unabashed, floridly creative, and human in the best sense of that word. Informationen zum Autor Mitchell Wilson is a training and supervising analyst at the San Francisco Center for Psychoanalysis! USA. While in medical school at the University of California! San Francisco! he obtained a postgraduate degree in English Literature at the University of California! Berkeley! where he studied the early English novel and Lacanian theory. He has been a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar! and has served on the editorial boards of the Psychoanalytic Quarterly and the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association . Currently! he is Editor-in-Chief of JAPA . A multi-faceted theoretical exploration of desire in psychoanalytic studies. Zusammenfassung Mitchell Wilson explores the fundamental role that lack and desire play in psychoanalytic interpretation by using a comparative method that engages different psychoanalytic traditions: Lacanian, Bionian, Kleinian, Contemporary Freudian. Investigating crucial questions Wilson asks: What is the nature of the psychoanalytic process? How are desire and counter-transference linked? What is the relationship between desire, analytic action, and psychoanalytic ethics? Inhaltsverzeichnis PrefaceAcknowledgments1. The Voice Endures2. If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler: The Psychoanalyst as Innkeeper3. On the Threat of Narcissistic Closure: Lacan’s Mirror Stage, Cognitive Bias, and Narrative4. The Analyst's Desire and the Analyst’s Resistance5. “Nothing Could Be Further from the Truth”: Lack and the Analyst’s Attitude6. The Analyst as Listening-Accompanist: Desire in Bion and Lacan7. Desire and Responsibility: The Ethics of Countertransference Experience8. The Ethical Foundation of Analytic Action9. The Proleptic Unconscious and the Exemplary Moment in Psychoanalysis10. “And Let Me Go On”: Desire and the Ending of AnalysisReferencesIndex...