ABSTRACT

Several thousand years ago Indo-European culture diverged into two ways of thinking; one went West, the other East. Tracing their differences, Christopher Bollas examines how these mentalities are now converging once again, notably in the practice of psychoanalysis.  

Creating a freely associated comparison between western psychoanalysts and eastern philosophers, Bollas demonstrates how the Eastern use of poetry evolved as a collective way to house the individual self. On one hand he links this tradition to the psychoanalytic praxes of Winnicott and Khan, which he relates to Daoism in their privileging of solitude and non verbal forms of communicating. On the other, Bollas examines how Jung, Bion and Rosenfeld, assimilate the Confucian ethic that sees the individual and group mind as a collective, while Freudian psychoanalysis he argues has provided an unconscious meeting place of both viewpoints.     

Bollas’s intriguing book will be of interest to psychotherapists, psychoanalysts, Orientalists, and those concerned with cultural studies.

  

part One|32 pages

Preconceptions

chapter Chapter 1|8 pages

Moments

chapter Chapter 2|15 pages

Self as Poem

chapter Chapter 3|7 pages

Rites of Passage

part Two|40 pages

Realizations

chapter Chapter 4|9 pages

Life's Gate

chapter Chapter 5|5 pages

Spiritual Integration

chapter Chapter 6|10 pages

To the Task Inwardly

chapter Chapter 7|14 pages

Inaction Happiness

part Three|46 pages

Conceptualizations

chapter Chapter 8|7 pages

Cultivation

chapter Chapter 9|8 pages

Rifts in Civilization

chapter Chapter 10|6 pages

Lost in Thought

chapter Chapter 11|7 pages

Group Mind

chapter Chapter 12|12 pages

Possibilities

chapter Chapter 13|4 pages

Coda