ABSTRACT

The ways in which an individual (the subject) relates to and perceives other people (his or her 'objects') has always been a preoccupation of psychoanalysis and in recent years a plethora of concepts has grown up in the literature. In this ground-breaking study, Meir Perlow sets out to clarify the changing meanings of the different concepts from context to context, discussing in depth the theoretical issues underlying them.

The book begins with an historical survey of how mental objects have been understood in the various 'schools' of psychoanalysis as they have developed. These include Freud and his associates, the object-relations approaches of Klein, Fairbairn and Bion, orientations derived from ego psychology such as those of Schafer and Kernberg, and the self orientation of Winnicott and Kohut. In Part Two the author discusses the conceptual and clinical issues involved in the major differences between the concepts. Finally, in Part Three he delineates three basic meanings of the concepts of mental objects as they have emerged in the literature and shows how they are related to ongoing issues in contemporary psychoanalysis.

This long overdue clarification of a complex area, with its wide ranging and imaginative grasp of the different theories about objects, will be an invaluable reference for all psychoanalysts and psychologists.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter |1 pages

Part One Historical survey

chapter 1|18 pages

Freud and his associates

chapter 2|34 pages

Object-related orientations

chapter 3|34 pages

Orientations in ego psychology

chapter 4|8 pages

Self orientations

chapter |1 pages

Part Two Major theoretical issues

chapter 7|2 pages

The mental object and motivation

chapter 10|3 pages

Responsibility—the clinical issue

chapter |1 pages

Part Three A conceptual analysis

chapter 12|4 pages

Mental objects as phantasies

chapter 13|5 pages

Mental objects as developmental capacities

chapter 14|1 pages

Conclusion