ABSTRACT

Psychotherapy and psychoanalysis don't always work. Inevitably, a therapy or analysis may fail to alleviate the suffering of the patient. The reasons why this occurs are as manifold as the patients and analysts themselves, and oftentimes are a source of frustration and vexation to clinicians, who aren't always eager to discuss them. Taking the challenge head-on, Arnold Goldberg proposes to demystify failure in an effort to determine its essential meaning before determining its causes. Utilizing multiple vignettes of failed cases, he offers a deconstruction and a subsequent taxonomy of failure, delineating cases that go bad after six months from cases that never get off the ground, mismatches from impasses, failures of empathy from failures of inattention. Commonalities in the experience of failure – conceived as less a misapplication of technique than consequences of a co-constructed yet fraught therapeutic relationship – begin to emerge for scrutiny.

chapter |14 pages

Introducing Failure

Who's the Greatest?

chapter |11 pages

The Failure Project

chapter |14 pages

Facing Failure

chapter |13 pages

Dismissing Failure

chapter |12 pages

Deconstructing Failure

chapter |11 pages

A Taxonomy of Failure

chapter |13 pages

Failure to Launch

chapter |15 pages

On Losing One's Patience

chapter |13 pages

Analyzability and Failure

chapter |13 pages

How Does Analysis Fail?

chapter |14 pages

Me and Max *

A Misalliance of Goals

chapter |18 pages

Empathy and Failure *

chapter |13 pages

Rethinking Empathy

chapter |11 pages

Self Psychology and Failure

chapter |13 pages

The Future for Failure