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Psychogenesis Polymorphism and Countertransference. This latest volume in the Psychoanalysis and Women Series for the Committee on Women and Psychoanalysis of the International Psychoanalytical Association presents and discusses theoretical and clinical work from a number of authors worldwide. It clearly demonstrates that there is no typical development of homosexuality.
List of contents
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ABOUT THE EDITORS AND CONTRIBUTORS SERIES EDITOR'S FOREWORD INTRODUCTION by Elda Abrevaya CHAPTER ONE Gender as heritage of the first qualitative differentiation - Paul DenisCHAPTER TWO Male homosexuality in analytic treatment - Jacques AndreCHAPTER THREE Discussion of "Male homosexuality in analytic treatment", by Jacques Andre - Giovanna AmbrosioCHAPTER FOUR The two analyses of a gay man: the interplay of social change and psychoanalytic understanding - Ralph RoughtonCHAPTER FIVE The same and the other: homosexuality in adolescence - Monique CournutCHAPTER SIX Discussion of "The same and the other: homosexuality n adolescence", by Monique Cournut - Juan-Eduardo TesoneCHAPTER SEVEN The obscure object of desire - Ferhan OzenenCHAPTER EIGHT Inside Sisyphus's nightmare: destructive narcissism and death instinct - Raquel Cavaleiro FerreiraCHAPTER NINE Discussion of "Inside Sisyphus's nightmare: destructive narcissism and death instinct", by Raquel Cavaleiro Ferreira - Martina BurdetCHAPTER TEN Homosexuality and the parental figures - Ester Palerm Mari and Teresa FloresCHAPTER ELEVEN The two faces of the medallion - Ayse KurtulCHAPTER TWELVE Discussion of "The two faces of the medallion", by Ayse Kurtul - Ingrid Moeslein-TeisingCHAPTER THIRTEEN A woman looking for a woman - F. Gover Kazanciog?lu and Elda AbrevayaSUMMARY The clinical chapters: some concluding thoughts - Elda AbrevayaAFTERWORD - Frances Thomson-SaloINDEX
About the author
Elda Abrevaya
Summary
This latest volume in the Psychoanalysis and Women Series for the Committee on Women and Psychoanalysis of the International Psychoanalytical Association presents and discusses theoretical and clinical work from a number of authors worldwide. It clearly demonstrates that there is no typical development of homosexuality.