ABSTRACT

Psychoanalytic Work with Families and Couples rethinks the ways in which conflicts present today in psychoanalytic consulting rooms and the nature of suffering in family, couple, and sibling bonds.

Based on two major concepts, that of device (drawn from the philosophers Foucault, Deleuze, and Agamben) and that of link (developed by Berenstein and Puget), the authors have developed new approaches to clinical practice with families and couples that focus on the complexity, singularity, and immanence of patient-analyst interaction in the session. In thinking about link dynamics, moreover, they go beyond the consulting room to reflect on how these dynamics develop in other spaces, such as institutions, organizations, and the fraternal circle of colleagues.

Part I, Couples and Families Today, discusses changes undergone by families and couples in the last thirty years and their effects on psychoanalytic practice. Attributing a link logic to suffering and to the situations that condition it implies making significant decisions regarding our clinical strategy, our choice of a device and of an interpretive path. Faithful to the idea that the clinical dimension calls for transformations, the second part, Facing Clinical Challenges, includes clinical materials from manifold treatment devices that attest to changes both in contemporary paradigms and in the professional lives of psychoanalysts.

Psychoanalytic Work with Families and Couples will be of great interest to all practicing psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part I|95 pages

Couples and families today

chapter Chapter 1|13 pages

Clinical devices

chapter Chapter 2|6 pages

The suffering of couples and families

chapter Chapter 3|5 pages

Family practice

chapter Chapter 4|11 pages

Couples in conflict

chapter Chapter 5|7 pages

Thinking about siblings

chapter Chapter 6|13 pages

On clinical interventions

chapter Chapter 7|15 pages

The fraternal dimension and trauma

chapter Chapter 8|5 pages

Deficit and excess in contemporary life

chapter Chapter 9|7 pages

Exploring memory and forgetting

chapter Chapter 10|11 pages

Sexualities in the plural

Conflicting practices and representations

part II|26 pages

Facing clinical challenges

chapter Chapter 11|5 pages

The psychoanalyst’s writing process

chapter Chapter 12|10 pages

Creating a link in the supervision space

chapter Chapter 13|9 pages

Between analysts