ABSTRACT

Playing at Work offers a thorough guide to the innovative psychoanalytic practices of Vincenzo Bonaminio, as he draws on the work of Winnicott, Bollas, and Tustin to demonstrate an effective method for working with adults, adolescents, and children in clinical settings.

Using several clinical cases, the book explores central psychoanalytic concepts such as transference and countertransference, identity and self, embodiment, anxiety, and the role of parental influence on psychic development. By providing extended commentary on his case material, Bonaminio illustrates the significance of writing about clinical practice to the development of techniques that address patients' varying needs. Simultaneously, this text offers a method that cultivates each patient's capacity for intuition and the use of metaphor to form their own interpretations, and thereby invests a sense of freedom into the analytic situation.

By its deeply reflective insights, and its emphasis on the contribution made by the analyst as an active participant in the therapeutic situation, Playing at Work forms essential reading for all practicing psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists who wish to improve their clinical practice with patients of any age.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

An Unconventional Introduction for an Anglo-American Readership

chapter 2|32 pages

Clinical Winnicott

Traveling a Revolutionary Road

chapter 3|15 pages

A Task Which Can Never Be Accomplished

Dealing with Mother's Mood – Winnicott's Clinical Understanding of Psychic Work Carried Out for the [M]Other

chapter 4|15 pages

The Analyst Oscillating Between Interpreting and Not Interpreting

Defense Is an Attempt to Deny Inner Reality; It Is an Escape to External Reality and an Attempt to Maintain Suspended Animation

chapter 7|7 pages

The Adolescent's Discourse

New Forms of Civilization's Discontents

chapter 8|27 pages

Parental Prefabrication of the Self

An Account of the Analysis of a 30-Year-Old Man

chapter 9|34 pages

“These Anxieties are not Mine”

Adolescence, the Oedipal Configuration, and Transgenerational Factors

chapter 11|17 pages

“Noticing, Understanding and Interpreting”

‘The Mother's Madness Appearing in the Clinical Material as an Ego-Alien Factor’ (1969)