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Informationen zum Autor Marilia Aisenstein is a member and training analyst of the Paris Psychoanalytical Society and of the Hellenic Psychoanalytical Society. A past President of the Paris Psychoanalytical Society, past President of l'Institut de Psychosomatique de Paris, former European representative to the Board, and former Chair of International Psychoanalytical Association International New Groups, she is the author of many papers and publications about psychosomatics and received the Bouvet Award in 1992. Elsa Rappoport de Aisemberg is a member and training analyst, and former Vice President of the Argentine Psychoanalytic Association (APA). She is a member of the International Psychoanalytical Association Allied Centre Committee, past Chair of Scientific Colloquiums and Adviser for the Scientific Department of the APA, and Chair of the Research Group on Psychosomatics at the APA. She is the author of many papers and publications on psychosomatics. Klappentext Psychosomatics have classically been of peripheral importance within our well-known theoretical models! despite the fact that they do have a history in psychoanalysis. This might be owing to the fact that Freud did not explicitly approach psychosomatics and! in consequence! did not put forward any hypotheses within his theoretical body. Psychoanalysts work more and more with patients presenting psychosomatic disorders. Present day descriptive and classificatory psychiatry tends to see only one clinical frame under the confusing term of somatisation. But since Freud, psychoanalysis has helped us to understand the complexity and the diversity of psychopathological organizations which may have somatising consequences (conversion hysteria, essential depression, functional disorders, hypochondria, etc). The book which Marilia Aisenstein and Elsa Rappoport de Aisemberg present here, gives us a modern view in direct line with all the previous researches, showing us how we can rethink this plurality. Authors who have found their main source, either in the Paris Psychosomatic School, or in the long tradition of South American studies, mainly in Argentina, all bring in their own manner an original theoretical reflection on this subject. The reader will also profit from their very interesting clinical cases. This book throws a new light, of great interest, on a field where there have been few recent publications. Zusammenfassung Psychosomatics have classically been of peripheral importance within our wellknown theoretical models, despite the fact that they do have a history in the field of psychoanalysis. This might be owing to the fact that Freud did not explicitly approach psychosomatics and, in consequence....