ABSTRACT

Ogden sets out a movement in contemporary psychoanalysis toward a new sensibility, reflecting a shift in emphasis from what he calls "epistemological psychoanalysis" (having to do with knowing and understanding) to "ontological psychoanalysis" (having to do with being and becoming).

Ogden clinically illustrates his way of dreaming the analytic session and of inventing psychoanalysis with each patient. Using the works of Winnicott and Bion, he finds a turn in the analytic conception of mind from conceiving of it as a thing—a "mental apparatus"—to viewing mind as a living process located in the very act of experiencing. Ogden closes the volume with discussions of being and becoming that occur in reading the poetry of Robert Frost and Emily Dickinson, and in the practice of analytic writing.

This book will be of great interest not only to psychoanalysts and psychotherapists interested in the shift in analytic theory and practice Ogden describes, but also to those interested in ideas concerning the way the mind and human experiencing are created.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Notes on being and becoming

chapter 2|24 pages

The feeling of real

On Winnicott's “Communicating and not communicating leading to a study of certain opposites”

chapter 3|15 pages

How I talk with my patients 1

chapter 4|26 pages

Destruction reconceived

On Winnicott's “The use of an object and relating through identifications”

chapter 5|19 pages

Dreaming the analytic session

A clinical essay

chapter 6|24 pages

Toward a revised form of analytic thinking and practice

The evolution of analytic theory of mind

chapter 7|15 pages

On language and truth in psychoanalysis

chapter 9|4 pages

Analytic writing as a form of fiction