ABSTRACT

Drawing on the writings of Freud, Fairbairn, Klein, Sullivan, and Winnicott, Spezzano offers a radical redefinition of the analytic process as the intersubjective elaboration and regulation of affect. The plight of analytic patients, he holds, is imprisonment within crude fantasy elaborations of developmentally significant feeling states. Analytic treatment fosters the patient's capacity to keep alive in consciousness, and hence reflect on, these previously warded-off affective states; it thereby provides a second chance to achieve competence in using feeling states to understand the self within its relational landscape.

part |55 pages

Knowing and Talking About Affect

part |57 pages

The Evolution of Psychoanalytic Thinking About Affects

part |65 pages

The Dialectics of Affect

chapter |34 pages

Patients and Their Discontents

Who or What Is Responsible?

part |52 pages

The Technical Implications of Affect Theory