ABSTRACT

In The Fallacy of Understanding (1972) and The Ambiguity of Change (1983), Edgar Levenson elaborated the many ways in which the psychoanalyst and the patient interact - unconsciously, continuously, inevitably.  For Levenson, it was impossible for the analyst not to interact with the patient, and the therapeutic power of analysis derived from the analyst's ability to step back from the interactive embroilment (and the mutual enactments to which it led) and to reflect with the patient on what each was doing to, and with, the other.

Invariably, Levenson found, the analyst-analysand interaction reprised patterns of experience that typified the analysand's early family relationships.  The reconceptualization of the analyst-analysand relationship and of the manner in which the analytic process unfolded would become foundational to contemporary interpersonal and relational approaches to psychoanalysis and psychotherapy.  But Levenson's perspective was revolutionary at the time of its initial formulation in The Fallacy of Understanding and remained so at the time of its fuller elaboration in The Ambiguity of Change.

The Analytic Press is pleased to reprint within the Psychoanalysis in a New Key Book Beries two works that have proven influential in the realignment of psychoanalytic thought and practice away from Freudian drive theory and toward a contemporary appreciation of clinical process in its interactive, enactive, and participatory dimensions.  Newly introduced by series editor Donnel Stern, The Fallacy of Understanding and The Ambiguity of Change are richly deserving of the designation "contemporary classics" of psychoanalysis.



 

chapter |66 pages

of His Times

chapter |4 pages

If he not

chapter |35 pages

of these ambivalent or ambiguous

chapter |13 pages

If the therapist can be loving,

chapter |12 pages

Index

chapter |6 pages

PREFACE

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

chapter |3 pages

The Oedipus Myth: Conflict or Mystery

chapter |1 pages

THE AMBIGUITY OF CHANGE

chapter |2 pages

The Oedipus Myth: Conflict or Mystery

chapter |4 pages

or Semiotics

chapter |6 pages

The Symptom as Meaning

chapter |2 pages

The Symptom as Meaning It

chapter |2 pages

Symptom as Meaning

chapter |6 pages

The Symptom as Meaning

chapter |8 pages

Praxis: The Common Ground

chapter |10 pages

Praxis: The Field

chapter |28 pages

Praxis: Uses

chapter |14 pages

Models

chapter |2 pages

Conclusion

chapter |14 pages

Conclusion