Fr. 40.90

Essential Aloneness - Rome Lectures on Dw Winnicott

English · Hardback

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Description

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Essential Aloneness presents a series of lectures on DW Winnicott delivered by Christopher Bollas in the 1980s to students and staff of the Institute of Child Neuropsychiatry at the University of Rome. One of Winnicott's literary editors, Bollas brings a unique perspective in real time to the challenges Winnicott's thinking posed to the psychoanalytical, literary, and intellectual culture in the United Kingdom and abroad in the decade after Winnicott's death.

List of contents










  • Introduction

  • Winnicott Books Cited

  • Chapter 1: Aloneness

  • Chapter 2: Living with...(M)other

  • Chapter 3: True Self

  • Chapter 4: Becoming a Living Reality

  • Chapter 5: False Self

  • Chapter 6: On Celebration and Ruthlessness

  • Chapter 7: Transitional Objects

  • Chapter 8: The Uses of Illusion

  • Chapter 9: Communicating/Not Communicating

  • Chapter 10: Being and Potential Space

  • Chapter 11: Object Relating

  • Chapter 12: The Use of an Object

  • Chapter 13: The Vitality of Aggression

  • Chapter 14: Morals

  • Chapter 15: Playing and Creativity

  • Chapter 16: Questions

  • Chapter 17: Case Presentations

  • Bibliography



About the author

Christopher Bollas, PhD, is one of the leading theorists in psychoanalysis. Bollas was Professor of English at the University of Massachusetts from 1983 to 1987, Visiting Professor of Psychoanalysis at the University of Rome from 1978 to 1998, Director of Education at the Austen Riggs Center in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, from 1984 to 1987, and has been a visiting lecturer at universities in the United Kingdom and the United States. He is often noted for his inventive use of ordinary terms or his neologisms, and for his creatively accessible works.

Summary

Essential Aloneness presents a series of lectures on DW Winnicott delivered by Christopher Bollas in the 1980s to students and staff of the Institute of Child Neuropsychiatry at the University of Rome. Those attending were familiar with Winnicott's works; indeed, many were expert. But a question remained. How do you use Winnicott's concepts in the clinical space? Bollas not only addresses that question but also writes about his own clinical formulations at the time, such as 'the transformational object' or 'the unthought known.'

Each chapter contains a unique and distinct talk, as delivered and suffused with the aliveness that is a hallmark of in-person lectures, with Bollas exhibiting a remarkable flexibility of scope and focus in order to meet the attendant group's clinical interests. The book teems with questions of Winnicottian psychoanalytic theory and practice no less relevant today than when the lectures were first delivered. These questions identify the subtle and complex positions taken by Winnicott, as understood by Bollas and other analysts in the United Kingdom and in Italy, who worked with him and knew how to make use of the Winnicott object.

One of Winnicott's literary editors, Bollas brings a unique perspective in real time to the challenges Winnicott's thinking posed to the psychoanalytical, literary, and intellectual culture in the United Kingdom and abroad in the decade after Winnicott's death.

Additional text

Just as Winnicott is being officially canonised as one of the 'masters' of psychoanalysis

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