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Table des matières
ABOUT THE AUTHOR PSYCHOANALYTIC IDEAS AND APPLICATIONS SERIES - IPA Publications CommitteeINTRODUCTION Primary trauma, splitting, and non-symbolic primary bindingPART I: AGONY CHAPTER ONE Drives and intersubjectivity CHAPTER TWO The capacity to be alone in the presence of the analyst CHAPTER THREE Interpretation, play, and style CHAPTER FOUR Play and potential CHAPTER FIVE Communicating primitive experiences CHAPTER SIX The primitive "inter-I" and primary "doubled" homosexuality CHAPTER SEVEN Destructiveness and complex forms of the "survival" of the objectPART II: SYMBOLIZATIONS CHAPTER EIGHT The symbolizing function of the object CHAPTER NINE Associativity and non-verbal language CHAPTER TEN Research and exploration in psychoanalysis REFERENCES INDEX
A propos de l'auteur
Rene Roussillon, who was born in July 1947, was awarded a PhD in clinical psychology in 1988. In 1989, he was appointed Professor of Clinical and Pathological Psychology in the University of Lyon-II. From that point onwards, he has been the Head of the Clinical Psychology department in Lyon University and of the research team focusing on "the subjectivation process in borderline and extreme situations". He is also the Director of the clinical "psycho-hub" of the Rhone-Alpes region in France, a facility that he founded in 2007. In 1991, he became a Full Member of the Paris Psychoanalytical Society and of the Lyon/Rhone-Alpes Psychoanalytical Group; he is a former President of that association. He has published several books in French on psychoanalysis, as well as a significant number of articles (which have been translated into English, German, Italian, French, Portuguese, Russian, Turkish, Greek, Romanian, and Bulgarian). In 1991, he was the recipient of the prestigious Maurice Bouvet Award for his book 'Paradoxes et Situations Limites de la Psychanalyse' ('Paradoxes and Borderline Situations in Psychoanalysis'). The main topics of his research work in psychoanalysis have to do with psychical trauma, the analysing situation, and the various forms of transference which may prove problematic within that setting.
Résumé
Intends to establish a unitary model of the processes at work in different forms of narcissistic pathology. This title offers a model that is both an alternative and complementary to Freud's model of what is usually considered to be neurotic problems.