ABSTRACT

Using Winnicott’s classic paper as its starting point, this fascinating collection explores a range of clinical and theoretical psychoanalytic perspectives around relating to "the object." Each author approaches the topic from a different angle, switching among the patient’s use of others in their internal and external lives, their use of their therapist, and the therapist’s own use of their patients.

The use of objects is susceptible to wide interpretation and elaboration; it is both a normal phenomenon and a marker for certain personal difficulties, or even psychopathologies, seen in clinical practice. While it is normal for people to relate to others through the lens of their internal objects in ways that give added meaning to aspects of their lives, it becomes problematic when people live as if devoid of a self and instead live almost exclusively through the others who form their internal worlds, often leading them to feel that they cannot be happy until and unless others change.

Assessing the significance of objects among adult and child patients, groups and the group-as-object, and exploring Freud’s own use of objects, The Use of the Object in Psychoanalysis will be of significant interest both to experienced psychoanalysts and psychotherapists and to trainees exploring important theoretical questions.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

How do we use others?

chapter 1|13 pages

Living in the object

chapter 3|11 pages

Dreaming up, re-finding, and grieving lost objects

A case study

chapter 4|25 pages

Creating a new relationship in child analysis

Revisiting theoretical ideas of developmental and transference objects

chapter 5|22 pages

Analysis interminable

The analyst’s self as object for the patient

chapter 6|12 pages

Can an ingroup be an internal object?

A case for a new construct

chapter 8|11 pages

The use of the object

Personal and clinical reflections

chapter |1 pages

Epilogue