ABSTRACT

Hailed as "important book certain to stir extended psychoanalytic debate" (American Journal of Psychiatry) on publication in 1979, Gedo's Beyond Interpretation set forth a radically new theoretical framework and clinical agenda for modern psychoanalysis. The theoretical framework revolved around Gedo's reconceptualization of human personality as a hierarchy of personal aims culminating in a "self-organization." The clinical agenda followed from the need for interventions that regularly went "beyond interpretation" in helping patients cope with primitive illusions, failures of integration, and traumatization. In this extensive revision of the 1979 text, Gedo refines his original formulations in light of the empirical findings and clinical advances of the past 15 years.

chapter 1|14 pages

A Psychology of Personal Aims

The Conceptual Baseline

chapter 2|10 pages

A Revised Theory of Psychoanalytic Therapy

chapter 3|10 pages

Orientation for Clinical Section

chapter 4|17 pages

First Clinical Illustration

A Disturbance of the Self-Organization

chapter 5|11 pages

Discussion of the Case of Nick

chapter 6|23 pages

Second Clinical Illustration

A Case of Fixation on Archaic Goals and Values

chapter 7|13 pages

Discussion of the Case of Kate

chapter 8|18 pages

Third Clinical Illustration

The Disordered Self as Conflicting Systems of Values

chapter 9|14 pages

Discussion of the Case of Henry

chapter 10|9 pages

Orientation for Theoretical Section

chapter 11|21 pages

The Theoretical Yield

chapter 12|9 pages

Metapsychological Considerations

chapter 13|18 pages

The Epigenesis of the Self-Organization

Formation of the Self

chapter 15|10 pages

The Mind in Disorder

chapter 16|8 pages

Reprise

On the Mode of Action of Psychoanalytic Therapy