Fr. 220.00

Mutual Analysis - Ferenczi, Severn, and the Origins of Trauma Theory

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 3 a 5 settimane

Descrizione

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Ferenczi's mutual analysis with Elizabeth Severn is one of the most controversial and consequential episodes in the history of psychoanalysis. In this book, Peter L. Rudnytsky draws on a trove of archival sources to provide a definitive scholarly account of this experiment, which constitutes a paradigm for relational psychoanalysis.

Sommario

Prelude: Ferenczi’s Secret Life PART 1: Conceptions 1. Traces of a Life 2. The Metaphysical Calling 3. Much Farther Than Freudianism 4. The Psychoanalytic Severn 5. The Case of Ferenczi 6. Mother and Daughter PART 2: Contexts 7. Polygamous Analysis 8. The End of the Affair 9. Ferenczi’s Sanity and the “Blood-Crisis” 10. Kissing Papa Ferenczi 11. Beyond Groddeck 12. The Evil Genius PART 3: Consequences 13. For No Assignable External Reason 14. Roux’s Needle 15. The Antitraumatic in Freud 16. New Veins of Gold Finale: A Whole Soul

Info autore

Peter L. Rudnytsky is Professor of English at the University of Florida and Head of the Department of Academic and Professional Affairs as well as Chair of the Committee on Confidentiality of the American Psychoanalytic Association. Coeditor of the History of Psychoanalysis series for Routledge and the Psychoanalytic Horizons series for Bloomsbury, he has edited Severn’s The Discovery of the Self in the Relational Perspectives series and received the Gradiva Award for Reading Psychoanalysis: Freud, Rank, Ferenczi, Groddeck.

Riassunto

Sándor Ferenczi’s mutual analysis with Elizabeth Severn—the patient known as R.N. in the Clinical Diary—is one of the most controversial and consequential episodes in the history of psychoanalysis. In his latest groundbreaking work, Peter L. Rudnytsky draws on a trove of archival sources to provide a definitive scholarly account of this experiment, which constitutes a paradigm for relational psychoanalysis, as Freud’s self-analysis does for classical psychoanalysis.
In Part 1, Rudnytsky tells the story of Severn’s life and traces the unfolding of her ideas, culminating in The Discovery of the Self. He shows how her book contains disguised case histories not only of Ferenczi and Severn herself—and thereby forms an indispensable companion volume to Ferenczi’s Clinical Diary—but also of Severn’s daughter Margaret, an internationally acclaimed dancer whose history of childhood sexual abuse uncannily replicated Severn’s own. Part 2 compares Severn to Clara Thompson and Izette de Forest as transmitters of Ferenczi’s legacy, sets the record straight about Ferenczi’s final illness, and reveals how Severn went beyond Freud and Groddeck in her capacity as Ferenczi’s analyst. Finally, in Part 3, Rudnytsky delineates the contrast between Freud and Ferenczi as men and thinkers and makes it clear why he agrees with Erich Fromm that Ferenczi’s example demonstrates how Freud’s attitude need not be that of all analysts.
The first comprehensive study of Ferenczi’s mutual analysis with Severn, this book is a profound reexamination of Ferenczi’s relationship to Freud and an impassioned defense of Severn and Ferenczi’s views on the nature and treatment of trauma. It will appeal to psychoanalysts and psychotherapists, especially to relational analysts, self psychologists, and trauma theorists.

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