ABSTRACT

In the past few decades, we have accumulated an impressive amount of knowledge regarding the neural basis of the mind. One of the most important sources of this knowledge has been the in-depth study of individuals with focal brain damage and other neurological disorders. This book offers a unique perspective, in that it uses a combination of neuropsychology and psychoanalytic knowledge from diverse schools (Freudian, Kleinian, Lacanian, Relational, etc.), to explore how damage to specific areas of the brain can change the mind.

Twenty years after the publication of Clinical Studies in Neuro-Psychoanalysis, this book continues the pioneering work of Mark Solms and Karen Kaplan-Solms, bringing together clinicians and researchers from all over the world to report key developments in the field. They present a rich set of new case studies, from a diverse range of brain injuries, neuropsychological impairments and even degenerative and paediatric pathologies.

This volume will be of immense value to those working with neurological populations that want to incorporate psychoanalytic ideas in case formulations, as well as for those who want to introduce themselves in the neurological basis of psychoanalytic models of the mind and the broader psychoanalytic community.

part |29 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 1|7 pages

Great expectations

chapter Chapter 2|20 pages

From depth neuropsychology to neuropsychoanalysis

A historical comment 20 years later

part |74 pages

Neuropsychoanalyses

chapter Chapter 3|27 pages

Freud in the light of neuroscience

The brain in the light of psychoanalysis

chapter Chapter 4|19 pages

Relational neuropsychoanalysis

chapter Chapter 5|26 pages

Lacanian neuropsychoanalysis

On the role of language motor dynamics for language processing and for mental constitution

part |199 pages

Case studies

chapter Chapter 6|26 pages

A mother and wife, after right-hemisphere stroke

A self psychological perspective

chapter Chapter 7|22 pages

When the RIGHT hemisphere goes WRONG

Reality and phantasy following right hemisphere lesion

chapter Chapter 8|24 pages

Neuropathological inertia and re-mobilisation of cathexes

Brief psychodynamic therapy after basal ganglia lesions

chapter Chapter 9|28 pages

Forgetting, repeating, and working through

Unconscious learning and emotional regulation in a case of profound amnesia

chapter Chapter 11|24 pages

The role of language as a symbolic function to regulate emotion

Neurorehabilitation and psychodynamic treatment of a child with Landau-Kleffner syndrome

chapter Chapter 12|38 pages

The social reality of the self

Right perisylvian damage revisited

chapter Chapter 13|20 pages

Locked-in syndrome

The challenges of disentangling cognitive and dynamic factors

part |8 pages

Closing

chapter Chapter 14|6 pages

Final thoughts

The contribution of neuropsychoanalysis to neuropsychological rehabilitation